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Forum Discussion
bolan1
Oct 30, 2018Aspirant
Readynas NV+ v2 - RAID sync finished on volume C. The array is still in degraded mode
Hello,
I've been getting increasing warnings from my ReadyNas NV+ v2 recently about disk 4 having increasing uncorrectable errors. I went ahead and purchased a replacement hard drive and replaced t...
StephenB
Oct 30, 2018Guru - Experienced User
I suggest powering down the NAS and testing all 4 of the original drives in a PC using Seatools.
bolan1
Oct 30, 2018Aspirant
Thanks StephenB, I'll give that a shot. What exactly would this accomplish though? I thought once I pulled the bad drive out, wouldn't the NAS begin rebuilding the array and therefore possibly overwrite some data that was on the other 3 drives?
- StephenBOct 30, 2018Guru - Experienced User
bolan1 wrote:
Thanks StephenB, I'll give that a shot. What exactly would this accomplish though? I thought once I pulled the bad drive out, wouldn't the NAS begin rebuilding the array and therefore possibly overwrite some data that was on the other 3 drives?
There are some cases where the array is completely rebuilt - for instance, when you insert a third disk, and the RAID is converted from RAID-1 to RAID-5.
But your situation isn't one of those. Your resync was trying to reconstruct the contents of the failed disk from the remaining three. That process doesn't change the other three drives. It looks like it failed because of the second disk failure.
I'm suggesting that you test the disks with Seatools, because it is useful to know exactly what the disk health issues are. You might also have issues on the other two disks (since the disks are generally put into the NAS together, and operate together, they often can fail in rapid sucession). If disks aren't 100% dead, it is often useful to clone them to working new drives. Sorting this out up-front helps steer the data recovery approach.
If one of the failing drives are still (mostly) readable, you could attempt to clone it to a new drive. You then could boot the system with the clone. There would likely be some file system corruption, but there's a good chance you'd recover most (maybe all) of the files.
Another approach here is to use RAID recovery software (for instance https://www.r-studio.com/ ), or to use Netgear's data recovery service ( https://kb.netgear.com/69/ReadyNAS-Data-Recovery-Diagnostics-Scope-of-Service ).
- bolan1Oct 30, 2018Aspirant
Ahh, I think I'm seeing your troubleshooting logic here. Just so I understand what happened here, please confirm my thought pattern (humor me please).
Disk 4 reported errors, so I went and hot swapped it with a new drive.
The X-RAID rebuild kicked off, but during the process, disk 3 probably failed.
Since the rebuild process probably didn't completely finish, I now have 2 failed disks in this array, which is more than the allowed number of failed disks (1).
Therefore, the troubleshooting path is to check all 4 of the old disks with Seatools in order to confirm the status of each drive (making sure to power off the NAS, pull each drive out and label which disk is which). If I can determine that 3 of the disks are still viable (presumably disk 1, disk 2 and possibly the old disk 4), could I pop the old disk 4 into the NAS and boot it up? Would that overwrite any data, or would that give me a shot at recovering some or all of the data that resided on the array, now that I have 3 working disks in there?
If it does turn out that disk 3 and the old disk 4 are no longer viable, I could theoretically attempt to clone them, and then pop them back into the NAS. If that fails, I'm stuck with either using recovery software as you suggested, or possibly paying for data recovery.
Does that cover the gist of it?
Appreciate the help StephenB.
- bolan1Oct 31, 2018Aspirant
I performed a short generic pass test on all 4 of the original disks, and they all passed. Should I do the long generic test too? At this point, should I attempt to get new drives and clone the original ones? Would the new drives have to be same size as the original (2 TB)?
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