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Forum Discussion
lschumacher
Dec 17, 2016Aspirant
ReadyNAS 2120 Corrupt Root Error
Inherited the above device from an acquisition. Looking to repurpose it for some light storage use. Have gone through the Factory Default process and the OS Install process to clean it up. RAIDar returns the Corrupt Root error.
Have pulled out the disks and wiped the partitions individually as well and run through the process once more. Both processes seem to run and complete but they still return the error. Is there a fix for this or should I just call it a day?
lschumacher wrote:
After loading the other drives and starting the sync process, drive one started showing a failure.
That probably explains the persistent corrupt root.
If the drive is newly purchased, it is better to return it to the seller than the manufacturer. The seller will exchange it for a new drive, preserving the full warranty. The manufacturer will give you a recertified drive with a much shorter warranty (typically 12 months).
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- StephenBGuru - Experienced User
Maybe give it one more try, but this time zero the drives with vendor diags (seagate's seatools or western digital's lifeguard). Lifeguard's write test includes a "quick" option which is enough to delete the partition information, so the disk looks blank. Booting up with blank disks will automatically trigger a factory install (no need to use the boot menu).
There is no point in following the factory default with the OS reinstall - the factory default does a clean install of the OS on the disks.
- lschumacherAspirant
Thanks for the response and tips. I ended up deleting the partitions through Windows and it still wouldn't work. I pulled all of the drives except one and it finally finished to the point I could access the web interface. After loading the other drives and starting the sync process, drive one started showing a failure.
I'll probably pull it, start over with one of the other drives and get drive one replaced since it is still under warranty. I'll post a follow up when done.
- StephenBGuru - Experienced User
lschumacher wrote:
After loading the other drives and starting the sync process, drive one started showing a failure.
That probably explains the persistent corrupt root.
If the drive is newly purchased, it is better to return it to the seller than the manufacturer. The seller will exchange it for a new drive, preserving the full warranty. The manufacturer will give you a recertified drive with a much shorter warranty (typically 12 months).
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