I had RAID batteries die and when I rebooted the Server, I had an "error loading operating system." I booted from the CD, used the repair module, ran bootfix, and the server booted up fine. Could be a delayed write corrupted the MBR. Anyways, all was well Saturday and Sunday.
I now get an occaisional error that a file is missing or corrupt in the windows\system32 folder. This happens when I try to run a applet in that folder. When I went poking around the folder, I found the system32 folder and half of the folders missing. Attempting to expand some of those files from the CD, I get a message in explorer that system32 already exists. I ran chkdsk from the CD with the /f option and it is queues after the next boot.
Before I boot a server that appears to be functioning, anyone have any clues how a FAT table (or whatever NTFS calls its allocation table) gets corrupted? My RAID software says all is well. I have not seen something like this since like DOS 4.0 about 15 years ago.
I hesitate reboot since the server is running and I would hate for it not restart when there may be a fix without a reboot. On the other hand, I problably need to fix it sonner than later.
Any insight would be appreciated.
Don Phillips
I now get an occaisional error that a file is missing or corrupt in the windows\system32 folder. This happens when I try to run a applet in that folder. When I went poking around the folder, I found the system32 folder and half of the folders missing. Attempting to expand some of those files from the CD, I get a message in explorer that system32 already exists. I ran chkdsk from the CD with the /f option and it is queues after the next boot.
Before I boot a server that appears to be functioning, anyone have any clues how a FAT table (or whatever NTFS calls its allocation table) gets corrupted? My RAID software says all is well. I have not seen something like this since like DOS 4.0 about 15 years ago.
I hesitate reboot since the server is running and I would hate for it not restart when there may be a fix without a reboot. On the other hand, I problably need to fix it sonner than later.
Any insight would be appreciated.
Don Phillips