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Datadan's avatar
Datadan
Tutor
Aug 11, 2021
Solved

Lost connection to RNDP4000

I have a ReadyNAS pro 4 bay NAS running OS 6.0.10.0. It has been rock solid for years. Today I cannot access it. It has a static IP address. Raidar can't find it. I can't ping it. I have rebooted it several times. I see the act led flashing while booting and shortly after it starts up but then it extinguishes. My router detects the port running at 1gb/s. I don't get any errors on the NAS display. Any thoughts as to what is wrong? Is it bricked? Can I swap the drives out into a new ReadyNAS without losing data?

5 Replies

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  • Start by removing all the drives (labeling them by slot, so you don't lose track of the order).

     

    Then power up the NAS, and see if RAIDar will find it (and also look at the LCD display).  Both should give a no disks status, and you should get a DHCP address from your router.

     

    You can also test the disks in a Windows PC with vendor tools (WD's lifeguard or digital dashboard, or Seagate's Seatools).  Windows can't mount the disks, but the diags will still find them.  You can connect them either using SATA or a USB adapter/dock.  Run the short test first, and if that passes run the full long test (the short test amounts to a confidence test).

     

    FWIW, I prefer lifeguard over the newer dashboard software - it gives more information on what's going on.

    • Sandshark's avatar
      Sandshark
      Sensei

      One problem with a static IP is that the router doesn't know that address is reserved, unless you've assigned one outside the DHCP range.  So it can assign two devices to the same address, making both inaccessible.  Address reservation in the router is a better way to get a fixed address for your NAS.

      • Datadan's avatar
        Datadan
        Tutor

        Sandshark wrote:

        One problem with a static IP is that the router doesn't know that address is reserved, unless you've assigned one outside the DHCP range.  So it can assign two devices to the same address, making both inaccessible.  Address reservation in the router is a better way to get a fixed address for your NAS.


        I shouldn't have that problem because my router's assignable DHCP range is configured above 192.168.2.100, wheras all of my static IP's are .10, .20, .30 etc.

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