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dieman's avatar
dieman
Aspirant
May 08, 2022

RN102: any way to access data on a 'dead or inactive' volume after factory reset?

A factory reset has been performed on RN102 with a disk pulled out of the bay.

Now the RN responds again, but, the volume is, of course, not recognised anymore. The system detects it as 'dead or inactive'. I am pretty sure that the disk and the data on it are OK. Is there any way to have the volume on that disk recognised by the RN again?

  

 

6 Replies

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  • StephenB's avatar
    StephenB
    Guru - Experienced User

    dieman wrote:

    A factory reset has been performed on RN102 with a disk pulled out of the bay.

    Is there any way to have the volume on that disk recognised by the RN again?

      


    You can try powering up the NAS with only that disk inserted.  Then either copy off the data, or zero the other disk and re-insert it.

     

    FWIW, that general approach doesn't accomplish anything - the factory default just formats the disks, and does a fresh factory install on them.  And there is no way to sync the old volume to the new one. 

     

     

    • Sandshark's avatar
      Sandshark
      Sensei

      If you want to install both drives and copy from one to the other, there is a way via volume exportation.  But if you used the default name (data) for both volumes, then that option isn't available right away.  If you've not put anything of value on the new volume yet, you can just recreate the volume with a new name.  These are the steps:

       

      1. Destroy and re-create the main volume on the new drive with a name other than data or the name of any volume on the old one.  Skip this step if the new volume already has a unique name.
      2. Power down, remove that drive, and set it aside.
      3. Boot with the drive from the old volume.
      4. If there are any files in user home folders, copy or move them to a normal share.  If there are any shares named the same as on the new volume, re-name themIf you forget this step, the files will be accessible via SSH, but it's easier if you do it now.
      5. EXPORT that volume.  NOTE:  After you've done this, you cannot use this volume as a primary any more, so it is best to have a backup of the files before hand, just in case things go sideways. (There is a convoluted way to get it back to primary, but let's avoid that.)
      6. Power down and re-insert the new volume along with the old.  Upon power-on the old volume will be imported to the system as a secondary volume.
      7. Now you can move your files.
      8. Once done, power down and remove the original drive.
      9. Power back up.  The system will complain about the missing volume, but that's OK.  Because the next step is to DESTROY that volume.  Note that nothing actually happens to the volume, it can be re-imported later, since the volume was removed when destroyed.  (All the destroy does in this case is make the NAS "forget" the volume.)

      Now you're all set.

      • dieman's avatar
        dieman
        Aspirant

        Hi Sandshark,

        Thank you, this looks like a solution for migrating the primary drive. I shall try it out.

        Do you also have a solution for migrating the secondary drive? I mean, there is always the option of using an external USB drive as a "bucket", but is there a smarter way?

        The only possibility I can think of is by somehow designating the old secondary drive a primary - this way one would arrive at a configuration in which the data can be easily copied. But is this possible at all with ReadyNAS - designate secondary drive as primary? 

         

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