Disk Controller Error Event Id 11
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Event Id 11 Atapi
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ordeal with this Event 11 that Windows quietly generates. It took us few weeks to fully work out why Windows suddenly started hanging, misbehaving or even crashing with event id 11 kerberos-key-distribution-center blue screen. Now that I feel it is fully resolved, I thought I’d share
Event Id 11 Wininit
my conclusion (and the process) – hopefully it will help few others out there who are struggling with this. Ridiculously,
Event Id 11 Rpc
many people are likely affected by this issue, but unless they open Event Viewer and search for this event id 11, they will not realize that hanging is not “normal” behavior, even for Windows! https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/154690 OS seems to silently recover from this problem 10 to 60 seconds later, which is really strange in my book – considering that user isn’t even alerted to this serious atapi error. For impatient souls among us, here are my conclusions: First thing – check the SATA/EIDE and power cable connection between your hard-drive and the motherboard. If possible, try another SATA outlet on motherboard or another http://www.adir1.com/2012/01/solved-the-driver-detected-a-controller-error-on-deviceideideport2/ SATA cable if available. If it still happens, the bad news is that this is likely a disk controller error, which is especially problematic since nowadays disk controllers are built into the Motherboard. If you are in a budget crunch, one potential workaround is to slow down your HD to use different PIO. This may avoid hangs, but will slow overall performance, so no fun solution… Proper solution appears to be to replace motherboard, hence replacing disk controller. There are many motherboards starting at just $50 and in most cases it will improve overall performance and stability for you, even if you keep the same CPU and other components. I am pretty confident that this is the right diagnosis, as we went through a lot of trial and error investigative work, in a space of few weeks, after it started abruptly. At first, I was pretty much convinced that HD is dying. The system had two hard-drives, and the older hard-drive was seemingly working just fine, even with the same SATA cable and connected to the same slot on the Motherboard. Turns out it was using slower PIO by virtue of it being older HDD. During the troubleshooting process I rein
Disk Event 11 in the System Event Log Article Summary: This article provides information on event ID 11 (source Disk) in the System log of a Windows server. The error description reads as http://www.dell.com/support/article/us/en/04/SLN167235/en follows: The driver detected a controller error on Device\Harddisk#\DR#. This description is followed by several lines of hexadecimal data that can be used in troubleshooting if http://superuser.com/questions/141064/system-event-id-11-disk necessary. Microsoft has published several articles about this and other related errors. If a hardware issue is suspected, these articles may be useful in determining exactly what event id hardware is at fault: How to Troubleshoot Error Messages about Event ID 9 and Event ID 11 How to Troubleshoot Event ID 9, Event ID 11, and Event ID 15 Error Messages The error does not necessarily indicate a problem with the server, especially if the disk number in Harddisk# is greater than the event id 11 highest disk number that appears in Disk Management. In this case, the error is likely associated with a USB drive attached to the server. There is no authoritative list of USB drives compatible with different versions of Windows Server; however, the Windows Small Business Server (SBS) team has compiled a list of USB drives and the degree to which they function with SBS. It can be assumed that a drive which is compatible with a particular version of SBS will also be compatible with the corresponding version of Windows Server, as they are built upon the same kernel. Quick Tips content is self-published by the Dell Support Professionals who resolve issues daily. In order to achieve a speedy publication, Quick Tips may represent only partial solutions or work-arounds that are still in development or pending further proof of successfully resolving an issue. As such Quick Tips have not been reviewed, validated or approved by Dell and should b
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Super User Questions Tags Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Super User is a question and answer site for computer enthusiasts and power users. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top System Event ID 11 Disk up vote 3 down vote favorite Upon starting Windows Server 2008 R2 I get this error message: Event ID 11 Disk The driver detected a controller error on \Device\Harddisk3\DR3. There are also also 3 more similar messages for Harddisk 2, 4, and 5, but not zero or 1. Checking the event viewer reveals it's been going on for 3 months. I ran chkdsk - no bad sectors. Any advice on the cause, better still, a solution? hard-drive windows-server-2008-r2 controller share|improve this question edited May 14 '10 at 9:22 quack quixote 31.3k1068114 asked May 14 '10 at 8:44 Guy Thomas 2,39282544 add a comment| 1 Answer 1 active oldest votes up vote 1 down vote accepted I saw these errors when one of my RAID controllers was failing. You may find the below knowledge-base article helpful, although it provides general starting points rather than in-depth troubleshooting. In almost all cases, these messages are being posted due to hardware problems with either the controller or, more likely, a device that is attached to the controller in question. The hardware problems can be associated with poor cabling, incorrect termination or transfer rate settings, lazy or slow device responses to relinquish the SCSI bus, a faulty device, or, in very rare cases, a poorly written device driver. http://support.microsoft.com/kb/154690 Note that it can also be caused by using consumer grade drives with a RAID controller that expects writes to complete quickly. Although a write using a consumer grade drive my complete successfully, the RAID controller will report a t