Error Reading Volume Disk Partitions
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Enterprise See all trials » Related Sites Microsoft Download Center TechNet Evaluation Center Drivers Windows Sysinternals TechNet Gallery Training Training Expert-led, virtual classes Training Catalog Class Locator Microsoft Virtual Academy Free Windows Server 2012 courses Free Windows 8 courses SQL Server training Microsoft Official Courses On-Demand Certifications Certification overview MCSA: Windows partition is not accessible the file or directory is corrupted and unreadable 10 Windows Server Certification (MCSE) Private Cloud Certification (MCSE) SQL Server Certification (MCSE) Other resources TechNet Events Second shot for certification Born To Learn blog Find technical communities in your area Support Support options For business For developers For IT professionals For technical support Support offerings More support Microsoft Premier Online TechNet Forums MSDN Forums Security Bulletins & Advisories Not an IT pro? Microsoft Customer Support Microsoft Community Forums United States (English) Sign in Home Library Wiki Learn Gallery Downloads Support Forums Blogs We’re sorry. The content you requested has been removed. You’ll be auto redirected in 1 second. Windows 2000 Error Messages Reference Command Line Utilities FORMAT FORMAT Error reading partition table. ... Error reading partition table. ... Error reading partition table. ... There are no readable file allocation tables (FAT). ... The device is busy. ... Some file allocation tables (FAT) are unreadable. ... The disk is to
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Drive Is Not Accessible Access Is Denied
Imaging Receiving I/O Error Reading SSD During Full New Topic Reply to my hard disk partition are not showing Topic Printer Friendly Author Topic Slipshod Starting Member USA 7 Posts Posted-May 12 2013: 18:20:40 f:\ is not accessible. access is denied. Hello, I recently started getting an error when running a full image on one of my SSDs. Incrementals work fine, but a full fails with this verbiage in the logs https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc975132.aspx (I have redacted personal info and keys, etcetera).This particular partition is mostly read-only because it contains static information that does not change very often. CHKDSK does not find anything wrong with this drive partition.I am not having any full image problems with any of my other disks, either HDD or SSD.Here are the messages I am getting (tried twice; same error http://support.macrium.com/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=5485 both times):quote:Saving Partition - XXXX (J:) Reading File System Bitmap Saving Partition --------- Backup aborted! - Unable to read from disk - Error Code 1117 - The request could not be performed because of an I/O device error. --------- I/O Performance: Read 1.5 Gb/s - Write 535.9 Mb/s Macrium Reflect Professional Edition v5.1.5870The VSS log shows this:quote:Querying all shadow copies with the SnapshotSetID {RRRRRRRRRR} ...* SNAPSHOT ID = {ZZZZZZZZZZZZ} ... - Shadow copy Set: {YYYYYYYYYY} - Original count of shadow copies = 1 - Original Volume name: \\?\Volume{XXXXXXX}\ [J:\] - Creation Time: 5/12/2013 11:50:35 AM - Shadow copy device name: \\?\GLOBALROOT\Device\HarddiskVolumeShadowCopy98 - Originating machine: xxxxxxxx - Service machine: xxxxxxxx - Not Exposed - Provider id: {yyyyyyyyy} - Attributes: Auto_Release DifferentialWindows Events*****************************Date 5/12/2013 12:47:51 PM Type Error Event 0 Source C-Link ServiceAn error occurred with HDD Node Index was out of range. Must be non-negative and less than the size of the collection.Parameter name: indexIf any of the redacted information is needed, I can send this via PM or email. Thanks in advance!Intel Hex Core Processor, 64 GB RAM, Windows 8 Pr
Drive on the Host System When you map a virtual disk and its associated volume https://pubs.vmware.com/workstation-9/topic/com.vmware.ws.using.doc/GUID-896E61F5-0865-4D3B-975E-DE476AFC7168.html to a drive on the host system, you can connect to the virtual disk without opening a virtual machine. After you map the virtual disk to a drive on the host http://superuser.com/questions/143890/how-can-i-mount-a-vmware-disk-in-windows-7-64-bit system, you cannot power on any virtual machine that uses the disk until you disconnect the disk from the host system. Note You cannot map a virtual hard disk for a is not shared or remote virtual machine. Important If you mount a virtual disk that has a snapshot and then write to the disk, you can irreparably damage a snapshot or linked clone created from the virtual machine. Prerequisites ■ Power off all virtual machines that use the virtual disk. ■ Verify that the virtual disk (.vmdk) files on the virtual disk are not is not accessible compressed and do not have read-only permissions. ■ On a Windows host, verify that the volume is formatted with FAT (12/16/32) or NTFS. Only FAT (12/16/32) and NTFS formatting is supported. If the virtual disk has mixed partitions, for example, one partition is formatted with a Linux operating system and another partition is formatted with a Windows operating system, you can map the Windows partition only. ■ Verify that the virtual disk is unencrypted. You cannot map or mount encrypted disks. Procedure 1Mount the virtual disk to a drive on the host system. Option Description Windows host Select File > Map Virtual Disks. Linux host Select File > Mount Virtual Disks. 2Map or mount the virtual disk. Option Description Windows host In the Map or Disconnect Virtual Disks dialog box, click Map. Linux host In the Mount or Unmount Virtual Disks dialog box, click Mount Disk. 3On a Windows host, leave the check box Open file in read-only mode selected in the Map Virtual Disk dialog box. This setting prevents you from accidentally writing data to a virtual disk that might be the parent
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 How can I mount a VMWare Disk in Windows 7 64-Bit up vote 16 down vote favorite 11 I need to mount a VMWare disk image in Windows 7 64-Bit however the "VMware Mount Utility" only works on 32-Bit operating systems. Is there an application or method that I can use to mount the disk? windows-7 mount vmdk share|improve this question edited Jul 10 at 14:19 Hennes 51k776121 asked May 21 '10 at 22:02 Unkwntech 3442310 1 which version of vmware do you use? –akira Jul 3 '10 at 7:06 vmware workstation 9.0.0 does have a vmware-mount.exe that support windows 7 64-bit in Vmware\Vmware Virtual Disk Development Kit\bin. –Jichao Oct 20 '12 at 13:52 add a comment| 6 Answers 6 active oldest votes up vote 16 down vote Unfortunately, 64-bit Windows will restrict the ability to load 32-bit drivers, which is why the VMDK mounting utility is failing. I found this page that purports to be able to work around the problem by simply installing it in the Program Files directory instead of Program Files (x86), but it did not work for me; perhaps you will have better luck. You could also look for a third-party tool like vdk.exe, but alas, they too need to use a driver, which gets blocked—yes, even when installing/running as administrator (the source for VDK is available, so someone may take up the task of updating and compiling it for 64-bits). OSFMount actually has a 64-bit version, but unfortunately it only supports read-only for VMWare disks. There are a few threads on the VMW boards about this and it seems that the old DiskMount (5.5) just doesn't support 64-bit Windows and that a newer one is included as part of the developer tools (as though only devs would need such a utility). So your options are to use the vmware-mount utility from either the VMWare VDDK or the newer vSphere VDDK which contain a m