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Forum Discussion
stanleytberry
Oct 10, 2014Aspirant
ReadyNAS NV (RND4250-100NAS) hangs on boot
My ReadyNAS has been running flawlessly for years. I had to rewire my office. I powered off the ReadyNAS and took several days to rewire. When I powered on the ReadyNAS it hung during boot with a "Kernal error" and sat there for 24 hours before I turned it off. I've read every post herein that I think is related.
I carefully removed and tested each disk (Seagate 500GB Barracuda) with Seagate's Windows 7 based diagnostics. I'm using a USB disk cradle. Disk 4, the one that always ran a little warmer than the other 3 ... the one next to the vents ... the one with a lot of dust on it ... failed to even be recognized by the USB interface. Listening closely I hear an endless "whirr ... whirr ... whirr ..." when I power it on. An exact replacement is on the way to me.
I've read posts about replacing (in an attempt to recover) one disk. I'm frightened. How do I replace the disk without losing it all? I've not powered on the ReadyNAS again since I turned it off. I think I need a detailed step by step procedure.
How should I proceed, please?
Thanks,
Stan
I carefully removed and tested each disk (Seagate 500GB Barracuda) with Seagate's Windows 7 based diagnostics. I'm using a USB disk cradle. Disk 4, the one that always ran a little warmer than the other 3 ... the one next to the vents ... the one with a lot of dust on it ... failed to even be recognized by the USB interface. Listening closely I hear an endless "whirr ... whirr ... whirr ..." when I power it on. An exact replacement is on the way to me.
I've read posts about replacing (in an attempt to recover) one disk. I'm frightened. How do I replace the disk without losing it all? I've not powered on the ReadyNAS again since I turned it off. I think I need a detailed step by step procedure.
How should I proceed, please?
Thanks,
Stan
14 Replies
- mdgm-ntgrNETGEAR Employee RetiredSo you have no backup?
One option would be to clone your remaining three disks though you may find the NAS boots up fine with just those three disks installed.
If you clone your good disks then if something does go wrong at least you have the clones to fall back on. - stanleytberryAspirantI understood that the ReadyNAS would allow me to recover from the loss of a single disk. I'd rather like to see that promise fulfilled.
Most of the data that was on the ReadyNAS (all the really critical data) is backed up.
What I'd really like to know is:
1) do I stick the new HD into the ReadyNAS and power it up and expect it to recover?
2) do I power it up first and hot-swap the disk when the boot sequence fails ... and expect it to recover?
3) is there some other procedure I should be using?
How should I proceed, please?
Thanks, - mdgm-ntgrNETGEAR Employee RetiredWhat disks were in the NAS?
Did you start out with 4 disks installed or did you start with less disks installed and add more over time? - stanleytberryAspirantThe current configuration (4 disks) has been there since 2008. I don't even remember for sure which RAID.
- mdgm-ntgrNETGEAR Employee RetiredIf you boot without disks do you still get the kernel panic?
If not you could try powering off the NAS, putting the 3 good disks back in the same slot as before, booting the NAS, seeing if it comes up fine and if so adding a replacement disk to slot 4.
Note disk 4 may be the dedicated parity disk (has no partition on it) if you are using X-RAID. So it didn't even appear to your PC as if it were an uninitialised disk? - StephenBGuru - Experienced UserThe normal process would be to boot the NAS with the three good disks. Assuming it boots, then hot-insert the replacement drive (with the NAS running). It would then resync.
Backups are always recommended, as trusting your data to a single device creates a lot of risk. Also, it is quite possible that you have problems on the other disks that have not yet been detected. I have had disks that pass the non-destructive seatools tests, but which fail when you run the destructive ones.
Though I'm sure mdgm has good reasons for asking, and it would be best to finish that conversation before you do anything. - stanleytberryAspirant<rant on>
Back up procedures and processes are a topic for another venue. I worked for IBM (30 years), Compaq/HP (7 years) and did contract programming for about 2 and a half years. I managed back up processes for main frame computer rooms as well as many different kinds of small computers ... the least of which were the various computers in my own home since about 1979. I don't need to be chastised ... or even reminded ... about the reasons, the short comings and the complete failure of back up systems.
Sorry. You had no idea how many reels of half-inch tape I've shipped off to Iron Mountain, how many Iomega disks full of backups, how many TRAVAN tapes, how many DC2120 mini cartridges, how many 8" floppy disks, how many 5.25" floppy disks, how many 3" floppy disks, how many IBM data cartridges, even boxes of paper, most of which, if they were ever actually needed, failed completely to restore the data.
<rant off> - stanleytberryAspirantIf I boot the ReadyNAS NV with only 3 disks in it and it boots successfully ... is there some time limit on how quickly I need to insert the brand spanking new replacement for disk #4?
Thanks,
Stan - StephenBGuru - Experienced UserI think there should be a rant on/off tag for real... There are times I'd use it for sure. :twisted:
There are a lot posters here who are under the impression that RAID fully protects them from any possibility of data loss. You clearly aren't one of them.
There's no time limit on inserting the new drive. The volume is of course degraded until you do. I haven't resync'ed my NV+ in years, so I am not sure how long that will take. with 500 GB drives, my guess is a couple of hours at most, but that is just a guess. A 3 TB drive on my Pro-6 takes 12-24 hours to resync, depending on what else the NAS is doing.
Both RAIDar and Frontview (the web admin interface) will show you some progress indications, especially if you hover the mouse over the "ball" icons. The estimate completion times are way off, and usually much longer than it actually takes. - stanleytberryAspirantThanks. I'll try booting immediately ... to make sure there's not more to the problem. And leave it up until next Tuesday when Amazon/UPS promise delivery of the HD. I'll be back next week ... if not sooner ... but I hope not sooner.
Again, thanks.
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