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simca's avatar
simca
Aspirant
Feb 03, 2021

ReadyNAS RND2110 corrupt root

Hi,

I'm a bit confused on which ReadyNAS model I actually have. I understand the labeling is not always reflecting the actual model. My unit is labeled ReadyNAS Duo on the front panel (below the disk tray). On the bottom it is labeled ReadyNAS Duo RND2110 v2, and there is another sticker on firmware version: FW:V4.1.6

I had this unit for some years, and I think the f/w was upgraded to a slightly newer version a couple of years ago. This is probably the most recent version of today.

 

Well, here is the problem. Although I upgraded my main storage to a newer NAS, I want to continue using the RND2110 as a secondary backup source. But when trying to peform a factory reset and OS reinstall I'm stuck into "corrupt root" issues. I started out with two fresh (used, although wiped) 2TB WD20EFRX disks. These disks have acutally been used in the RND2110 earlier. However they have been temporary switched and reformatted to be used in the new NAS. After that I removed any partitions (using Windows disk manager) and inserted them back into the RND2110.

 

What has been tried:
1. Boot the RND2110 to factory default by holding the reset button until the disk LEDs light up for the second time. Then release the reset button. The RND2110 is now visible in RAIDar. When I click "Setup" and choose disk configuration the installation process apparently starts. But after a few minutes the process halts with a "corrupt root" message. I have repeated this process several times without success.

 

2. Creating an USB recovery disk. Here, it is a bit diverse instructions on how to properly do this. There are somewhat different procedures among forums. If this is the way to go, I would really appreciate a precise step by step advise on how to do. Anyhow, I tried to create this USB recovery image and booted the RND2110 into USB recovery mode. Again, the RND2110 shows up in RAIDar. But now, the status changes to "TFTP_REQ" after a while and apparently halts.

 

I would really appreciate some guidance !

Thank You!

Regards

SimCa

 

17 Replies

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  • simca wrote:

    I'm a bit confused on which ReadyNAS model I actually have. I understand the labeling is not always reflecting the actual model. My unit is labeled ReadyNAS Duo on the front panel (below the disk tray). On the bottom it is labeled ReadyNAS Duo RND2110 v2, and there is another sticker on firmware version: FW:V4.1.6

    You have the original Duo (called a v1 here).  It runs 4.1.x firmware, the v2 runs 5.3.x firmware.  Also, the original Duo says "ReadyNAS Duo" on the front panel.  The v2 says "ReadyNAS Duo v2" on the front panel.

     

    The final firmware for your NAS is 4.1.16: https://kb.netgear.com/000038792/RAIDiator-Version-4-1-16-Sparc

     

    FWIW, I also have this model, and am still using it as a secondary backup.

     


    simca wrote:

    Anyhow, I tried to create this USB recovery image and booted the RND2110 into USB recovery mode.

     


    Never do that when you aren't certain about the model.

     


    simca wrote:

     

    Well, here is the problem. Although I upgraded my main storage to a newer NAS, I want to continue using the RND2110 as a secondary backup source. But when trying to peform a factory reset and OS reinstall I'm stuck into "corrupt root" issues.

    Start by booting up the NAS with no disks.  RAIDar should detect a "no disks" status (and not corrupt root).  Either version (4.3.8 or 6.5) of RAIDar should work for this.  https://kb.netgear.com/20684/ReadyNAS-Downloads.  If you don't see a "no disk" status, then report back on what you do see.

     

    The simplest way to avoid the corrupt root problem is to unformat the disks.  Then the NAS will automatically do a factory install when you power it up with the disks in place.

     

    You can do that in Windows by going to the disk manager, selecting each "volume" for the disk, and deleting it.  But I'd suggest instead using the vendor tools (lifeguard for western digital, seatools for seagate), and testing the disks while you are at it.  Run the long generic test first, and follow that up with the full write zeros test (which might be called "erase", depending on which tool you are using).  With seatools, it is an "advanced" test, and you need to jump through a couple of hoops to enable it.

     

    The disk can be connected to the PC either with a USB adapter/dock or via SATA.

     

     

     

    • simca's avatar
      simca
      Aspirant

      Hi!

      Thanks a lot for the advise.

      Sadly that didn't work out. I followed your guidance, starting out with powering the RND without disks. As you correctly pointed out, RAIDar reported "no disks installed".

      Next, I executed a full erase from WD's Lifeguard disk tool. It took some hours to complete. I only did this for one disk to start with. I then inserted this newly erased disk into the RND and powered up (only one disk installed at this time). RAIDar reported "Installing" and everything looked promising for a few minutes. But again, the RND halted and status changed to "corrupt root". 

      Could it be a corrupted f/w on the chassis itself, and is there any chance to recover this?

       

       

      • Sandshark's avatar
        Sandshark
        Sensei

        Yes, that probably means the copy of the OS on the internal flash which the NAS installs on the hard drive is corrupt.  When you boot without drives, that's not the OS that's running; it's a much more lean one.  USB recovery should fix that unless the internal flash is defective.  But USB recovery is finicky about the USB device.  Definately no USB3, and I recommend 8GB or smaller, though I have seen somebody post that they got it to work with a 32GB one on an OS6 system.  Older/slower tends to be better in this case.  And having one with an activity LED helps, as you can see whether it looks to be accessed long enough or not.

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