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AnthonyDP's avatar
AnthonyDP
Aspirant
Oct 09, 2023
Solved

Readynas Ultra 6 died - migrate disks

Hello, My old but trustworthy nas (readynas ultra 6) seem to have passed, on the screen i get the "readynas" text and that's it.   Tried all sorts of things, including a new power supply.   Sinc...
  • StephenB's avatar
    StephenB
    Oct 10, 2023

    AnthonyDP wrote:

     

    Since the other NAS is on the same OS, I can just put the disks in the same order?

    Or isn't it going to be that simple.

     


    It is that simple, but I do suggest a couple of steps first.  Used NAS sometimes aren't fully functional.

     

    First install a test disk (just one in slot 1) in the NAS, and let it set up. Don't use a disk in the array - whatever disk you use will be reformatted, and anything on it will be lost. Make sure you log into frontview (https://nas-ip-address/admin).  The default admin password is netgear1. If you run into the SSL protocol version mismatch problem, post back and we can help with that.

     

    Check the firmware on the replacement, and update it to 4.2.31 (final firmware) if it is running something older before migrating the disks.

    If the firmware in the NAS is a different version than what is on the disks, then the OS on the disks will be either upgraded (or downgraded) to match.  Downgrading sometimes isn't a good idea, but it is always safe to upgrade.

     

    Now make sure every slot in the new NAS is functional.  Do that by

    1. powering down the NAS
    2. move the disk to the next slot
    3. power up and confirm that the NAS boots properly

    Repeat until all slots are checked. 

     

    Then power down the NAS, and migrate the disks (very important that the NAS be powered down).  Power up when all disks are migrated.  Assuming there was no damage as a result of the failure, it will boot up, and all settings will be identical to what you had on the old NAS.

     

    If the disks aren't labeled by slot, then I suggest labeling them as you remove them.  That makes sure you don't lose track of the slot order in the future.

     

     

     

    You should put a proper backup plan in place, as RAID isn't enough to keep your data safe (particularly on a NAS that is over 10 years old now).  Once you have everything backed up, I suggest you convert the NAS to run OS-6.  But that will require a full backup first, and the conversion requires reformatting the disks.  We can provide instructions when the time comes.

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