Problem is fixed, but it scared me to death and I'd like to know what happened: (Win 98, 64mb RAM)
The machine locked up cold, so I forced reboot. Startup prompted to insert boot disk because of invalid FAT or FAT32. I did a floppy boot with CDROM support, got warnings of bad partitions, and was unable to read from the CDROM even though I was at the D prompt. (couldn't even get E prompt) I could access the c:\ drive, but it was really just some sort of virtual ram disk or something, so scandisk didn't detect problems.
After multiple restarts, I lapsed into the mode where you get mad and try random things, and booted w/o CDROM support. No dice, but then booted with CDROM support again and was suddenly able to read from CDROM, ran setup, and filesystem was fixed.
My questions: What would cause a corrupt FAT, or was it just freakishly bad luck? Can this be prevented or the risk minimized?
Thanks,
petey
The machine locked up cold, so I forced reboot. Startup prompted to insert boot disk because of invalid FAT or FAT32. I did a floppy boot with CDROM support, got warnings of bad partitions, and was unable to read from the CDROM even though I was at the D prompt. (couldn't even get E prompt) I could access the c:\ drive, but it was really just some sort of virtual ram disk or something, so scandisk didn't detect problems.
After multiple restarts, I lapsed into the mode where you get mad and try random things, and booted w/o CDROM support. No dice, but then booted with CDROM support again and was suddenly able to read from CDROM, ran setup, and filesystem was fixed.
My questions: What would cause a corrupt FAT, or was it just freakishly bad luck? Can this be prevented or the risk minimized?
Thanks,
petey