Raid O Volume Error
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Wireless Forums. User Name Remember Me? Password Register FAQ Forum Rules Members List Calendar Today's Posts Advertise Search Search Forums Show Threads Show Posts Tag Search Advanced Search Go to Page... LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes #1 (permalink) 01-07-2007, 02:11 raid 0 error occurred (0) PM John Guest Posts: n/a "Error Occurred(0)" with RAID 0. What does it mean? During
Intel Rapid Storage Technology Raid Error Occurred (0)
boot up, one of my two week old hard disks in my RAID 0 is now reporting this error: "Error Occurred(0)" I googled for this
Raid 0 Error Occurred Fix
error message and found only one other person that reported this error and his screen snapshot is nearly identical to my problem. http://www.hardforum.com/showthread.php?t=1132761 None of the responses that I read in that thread were helpful to me. Using Western Digital diagnostic
Error Occurred (0) Hard Drive
tools, I tested each drive and no errors in either drive were discovered. Chkdsk also reported no errors. From the time I first observed this error message some days ago, the computer has been working without any apparent problems (boots up and runs just fine) but the error message is driving me nuts. I have two of these disks: Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD3200KS 320GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA RAID 0 with Intel Matrix Storage Manager Motherboard: ASUS P5B-E (latest BIOS installed). raid 1 error occurred 0 Intel ICH86/DO/DH SATA RAID Controller: Driver date: 5/11/06 Driver version: 6.0.0.1022 JMicron JMB36X Controller: Device type: SCSI and RAID controllers Manufacturer: JMicron Technology Driver date: 12/5/2006 Driver version: 1.17.8.1 Device manager reports no errors for either of the above controllers. XP Professional. All service packs and updates installed. Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 Conroe 2.4GHz 4M shared L2 Cache LGA 775 Processor Does anyone have any suggestions on how I can resolve this error message? #2 (permalink) 01-07-2007, 03:11 PM HDRDTD Guest Posts: n/a Re: "Error Occurred(0)" with RAID 0. What does it mean? It 'might' be that one of the drives has developed a SMART error. Years ago when the WD 36gig Raptors first came out, I had two iof them running in a RAID 0 array. My symtoms were slightly differenrt than your, mine would randomly lock up. Usually re-booting the system got it going again but I could never find the problem. One of the thing I did notice, was that none of the programs I tried could read the SMART status of either drive. After a while, I finally decided to change to a single Raptor 74gig in part becauise I wanted to replace the RAID array drives with some other drive for troubleshooting. Once I got the system running on the new drive, I installed the old drives as seperate drives, and lo and behold, one of the drives started reporting a SMART error.! I downloaded the W
tech Search Tags: Builds Cases Cooling CPUs Graphics Laptops Memory Monitors Motherboards more Peripherals PSUs Storage VR ForumStorage RAID 0 Volume Error on Vista MikeinizerDec 9, 2008, intel rapid storage raid 0 failed 9:09 AM Hello All,I've used this site previously for research and I generally intel matrix storage manager error occurred 0 raid 1 default here, however, this is my first post so please forgive me if I've posted this thread in the ssd error occurred(0) wrong area.Now to the point! I have a new Home Build (About 1 month now) and I would consider myself an advanced user. I built my own system and had it http://www.wirelessforums.org/alt-comp-hardware/error-occurred-0-raid-0-what-does-mean-14336.html evaluated and passed by a professional system builder.Bottom line, things have been fine until the other day when I started normally and received an error message during bootup on the initial BIOS screen when it was analyzing the RAID Array. I have an ASUS Maximus II Formula MoBo and have 2 250gb Seagate Barracuda's set to a 0 RAID configuration. The BIOS screen http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/247680-32-raid-volume-error-vista reports an error to one of my drives and when I boot into the OS it gives me an error message in the taskbar stating, "RAID VOLUME ERRORS: Some data requests to a hard drive in a RAID 0 volume failed but a back-up may be possible. Please try to back-up data immediately." When I x out of that message, I recieve an icon in the taskbar that states, "A drive in a RAID 0 volume is failing. Try to back up data immediately." The Intel Matrix Storage Console reports the error when it's double clicked on the taskbar and all information seems to point to the same drive as all numbers match.I've contacted Seagate and downloaded and ran SeaTools with both drives and the suspect drive reported errors, however, according to the program, it repaired the errors, I re-ran the program and it then passed the drive, but I'm still getting the red lettered error message for the drive on the BIOS startup screen and the taskbar is still reporting the error. I've checked all of the corresponding entries in my Device Mngr and they all repo
RAID (redundant array of independent disks) configurations that employ the techniques of striping, mirroring, or parity to create large reliable data stores from multiple general-purpose computer hard disk drives (HDDs). The most common types are RAID0 (striping), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_RAID_levels RAID1 and its variants (mirroring), RAID5 (distributed parity), and RAID6 (dual parity). RAID levels and their associated data formats are standardized by the Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA) in the Common RAID Disk Drive Format (DDF) standard.[1] https://forum.hddguru.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=29667 While most RAID levels can provide good protection against and recovery from hardware defects or defective sectors/read errors (hard errors), they do not provide any protection against data loss due to catastrophic failures (fire, water) or error occurred soft errors such as user error, software malfunction, malware infection.[2] For valuable data, RAID is only one building block of a larger data loss prevention and recovery scheme, it cannot replace a backup plan. Contents 1 RAID 0 1.1 Performance 2 RAID 1 2.1 Performance 3 RAID 2 4 RAID 3 5 RAID 4 6 RAID 5 7 RAID 6 7.1 Performance 7.2 Parity computation 8 Comparison 9 Non-standard RAID levels and non-RAID error occurred (0) drive architectures 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External links RAID 0[edit] Diagram of a RAID0 setup RAID0 (also known as a stripe set or striped volume) splits ("stripes") data evenly across two or more disks, without parity information, redundancy, or fault tolerance. Since RAID0 provides no fault tolerance or redundancy, the failure of one drive will cause the entire array to fail; as a result of having data striped across all disks, the failure will result in total data loss. This configuration is typically implemented having speed as the intended goal.[3][4] RAID0 is normally used to increase performance, although it can also be used as a way to create a large logical volume out of two or more physical disks.[5] A RAID0 setup can be created with disks of differing sizes, but the storage space added to the array by each disk is limited to the size of the smallest disk. For example, if a 120GB disk is striped together with a 320GB disk, the size of the array will be 120GBĂ— 2= 240GB. However, some RAID implementations allow the remaining 200GB to be used for other purposes. The diagram in this section shows how the data is distributed into Ax stripes on two disks, with A1:A2 as the first stripe, A3:A4 as the secon
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