Setup hardware raid server 2003




















Great servers otherwise :. HP has got to have a fix for this or someway to make it work. If you're asking for technical help, please be sure to include all your system info, including operating system, model number, and any other specifics related to the problem.

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Please remember to be considerate of other members. All submitted content is subject to our Terms Of Use. Hello all, I really need some help on this one. I have a HP ml that came stock with 1 80gig sata drive in and we loaded server std on it 3 months back.

The directors decided now that they want Raid 1 on the server. I was mistaken to believe that I could enable RAID 1 in the bios and set the copy and it would work without the worry of a complete reload of the os. But of course server does not boot. When i disable the raid - it boots fine, now I believe this is because the software has never seen raid and therefore cannot load from it. Is there any way at all to use the RAID1 hardware function without having to rebuild from scratch?

I do not want to use software raid if I can use the hardware way without too much effort. Any help will be greatly appreciated.

Share Flag. All Answers. The only options are F3 to quit or Enter to continue. I'm really bummed about having spent the extra effort to be prepared, and it working, but only halfway.

Any suggestions? I have nothing to offer except that it has happened to me with a real 3. Actually, no: the drivre doesn't have to be fully functional to account for what you're reporting.

In fact, what is likely to be happening in your case is that the driver cannot be loaded although there is an antry for your OS and hardware in the. Anyway: I've done several install of windows server using RAID drivers from a USB flobby without any problem that is, as long as I really had a good driver and floppy. It's definitely the correct card, unless someone clipped off all the legitimate chips and soldered on fakes.

It's definitely not the disk. Copied all files off it successfully, then full formated it and copied all files back - all good. This also demonstrates that the drive itself is in good working condition. This seems like one of those tricky nuances there would be some workaround for, though what exactly it is I have no idea. Again, the drive works fine the first time when it asks to specify additional SCSI devices. It reads the disk and copies the file.

How else would it know to ask specifically for the drivers for that card later on? It just seems ridiculous that the whole thing would work long enough for Server to recognize what kind of card it is, but then totally fail when it has to actually copy the driver to the windows directory. It should work provided you provide the correct files in the correct locations on the diskette.

Also as a side of futher proof, if your motherboard supports USB floppies most ca. And I do a lot of lab installs. Often when I've seen symptoms like you are seeing I'll try to redownload the driver or get a different driver. Sometimes you just plain grab the wrong files are are missing files since your hiding OS files dll, etc in your current explorer properties or something it happens to all of us.

This means it takes a high cost to set up hardware RAID. Software RAID is well supported by the operating system, which is implemented by OS kernel module, and no required extraordinary hardware. It is the best choice for common personal users and server users. RAID 1 is usually implemented as mirroring, is a fault-tolerant volume that duplicates data on two different physical disks.

Software RAID 1 is supported on dynamic disks and provides data redundancy by using two identical copies mirrors of the volume. If either drive fails, the other continues to work as a single drive until the failed drive is replaced. Conceptually simple, RAID 1 is popular for those who require fault tolerance and don't need top-notch read performance. However, you can use a computer that is running XP Professional to setup mirrored volumes on remote computers that are running Windows Server, Windows Advanced Server, or Windows Datacenter Server, or the equivalent versions of Windows Server At the same time, the implementation of software RAID1 is based on two dynamic disks.

One stores the data which is being used, and another keeps a copy of the previous one. If your disks not dynamic, please see "Regarding Basic Disk convert to Dynamic Disk" for more information. To set up software RAID, do as following:.



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