For all of you gurus out there, I have a HDD in a RAID array that has failed (believed due to a building overheat). The RAID array repaired itself, but three of the 4 disks were damaged. The array is still semi-functional, and I was able to restore 2 of the three bad disks. However, the third disk is reporting an astounding number of bad sectors (over 5000 in a 36 hour surface scan - I cancelled the test as I couldn't afford to wait longer). Interstingly enough, the HDD mfg (Seagate) tool indicates there are no physical problems with the disk, only corrupted file structure issues.
Anyway, the RAID array is still functioning, but it wants to rebuild itself to restore data integrity. Due to the physical limitations on this corrupted disk, it gets to the 55% mark and crashes out. This happens in the OS and in the BIOS rebuild. The RAID controller locks up (or reports that the disk has locked up) and crashes the array. The system either ends in a lock up or instant reboot. I have tried every form of chkdsk, scandisk, sector analysis, etc - both from the OS and the HDD and RAID manufacturers.
I believe if I can get a valid clone of this disk, the array will rebuild itself - errors and all - and I can fail out the bad disk (or even the copy of the bad disk) and have it rebuild the array with a good disk in its place. Since the file corruption is happening in only one logical partition - I can format that partition through the OS - and reinstall all the data (as this is the file server partition).
What I am looking for is a sector copy tool that will copy or clone the disk - bad sectors and all. I tried this with the RAID mfg utilities, as this was an option, but the software was limited in scope as a raw brute force sector by sector copy. When it came to a read error, it tried to copy the data, and crashed on the read. I know there are more elegant software solutions out there that will ignore bad sectors, and will clone the MBR and related data from the MBR. I read an intersting page that Norton Ghost would do this using the -IR or -IA switches from the command line, but I am concerned as this is in a RAID array on Win 2003 it will want to see the logical drives, and create corruption trying to fix anything it doesn't understand (also, it is intended for XP and 2000 only with no mention of RAID support). As I have not used Norton Ghost since its first releases, I am unsure if this will work with the drives plugged into a test pc. Where I can tell it to copy a "non-logical" drive to another "blank" drive. Any advice on this info (I have Ghost 10.0 BTW - just never used it) would be greatly appreciated.
Lastly, any suggestions or advice on other good software or utilities some of you have used in the past? I am trying to avoid reinstalling everything as this is on a W2k3 SBS server that is running Exchange, AD and acting as DC and file server. The critical data is secure - it is jut the hassle of restoring user profiles, mail, etc, and making sure everything syncs between the old and new copy.
Here are the technical specs if it matters:
Highpoint Rocket Raid 1820A controller
Seagate Baracuda 7200.7 120 GB SATA drives (4 drives, 1 hot spare, divided into 3 logical partitions)
Thanks in advance for any input or suggestions
Anyway, the RAID array is still functioning, but it wants to rebuild itself to restore data integrity. Due to the physical limitations on this corrupted disk, it gets to the 55% mark and crashes out. This happens in the OS and in the BIOS rebuild. The RAID controller locks up (or reports that the disk has locked up) and crashes the array. The system either ends in a lock up or instant reboot. I have tried every form of chkdsk, scandisk, sector analysis, etc - both from the OS and the HDD and RAID manufacturers.
I believe if I can get a valid clone of this disk, the array will rebuild itself - errors and all - and I can fail out the bad disk (or even the copy of the bad disk) and have it rebuild the array with a good disk in its place. Since the file corruption is happening in only one logical partition - I can format that partition through the OS - and reinstall all the data (as this is the file server partition).
What I am looking for is a sector copy tool that will copy or clone the disk - bad sectors and all. I tried this with the RAID mfg utilities, as this was an option, but the software was limited in scope as a raw brute force sector by sector copy. When it came to a read error, it tried to copy the data, and crashed on the read. I know there are more elegant software solutions out there that will ignore bad sectors, and will clone the MBR and related data from the MBR. I read an intersting page that Norton Ghost would do this using the -IR or -IA switches from the command line, but I am concerned as this is in a RAID array on Win 2003 it will want to see the logical drives, and create corruption trying to fix anything it doesn't understand (also, it is intended for XP and 2000 only with no mention of RAID support). As I have not used Norton Ghost since its first releases, I am unsure if this will work with the drives plugged into a test pc. Where I can tell it to copy a "non-logical" drive to another "blank" drive. Any advice on this info (I have Ghost 10.0 BTW - just never used it) would be greatly appreciated.
Lastly, any suggestions or advice on other good software or utilities some of you have used in the past? I am trying to avoid reinstalling everything as this is on a W2k3 SBS server that is running Exchange, AD and acting as DC and file server. The critical data is secure - it is jut the hassle of restoring user profiles, mail, etc, and making sure everything syncs between the old and new copy.
Here are the technical specs if it matters:
Highpoint Rocket Raid 1820A controller
Seagate Baracuda 7200.7 120 GB SATA drives (4 drives, 1 hot spare, divided into 3 logical partitions)
Thanks in advance for any input or suggestions