USB as a Main Storage device
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@Minion-Queen said:
No he decided he had to rebuild his desktop cause he downloaded a game that bogged it down. Darn kid.
What do you mean by rebuild? New hardware? System restore?
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System restore I think. With him you never know though.
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@Minion-Queen said:
System restore I think. With him you never know though.
Maybe he pulled new RAM out of somewhere we won't discuss. Who knows? LOL
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@thanksaj said:
@Minion-Queen said:
System restore I think. With him you never know though.
Maybe he pulled new RAM out of somewhere we won't discuss. Who knows? LOL
What ACTUALLY happened, is my system died. Motherboard failure by the looks of it, but I won't have time to fully troubleshoot until tomorrow evening. Thank goodness I just built myself a Mini-ITX PC a few days ago, I'm now able to use that as a work PC until that one is revived.
And if lack of sleep is a contest, I've gotten like 6 hours for the whole week
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You need sleep time to flush toxins from your brain.
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@scottalanmiller Yeah, probably. I plan on getting 7 hours or so tonight.
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@Mike-Ralston said:
@scottalanmiller Yeah, probably. I plan on getting 7 hours or so tonight.
That's a good idea.
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Maybe the power company sent bad power to that one machine, and now it's a paperweight. That would be my first guess. Don't listen to any of the nonsense coming from the "IT experts".
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So you think that the R510 is bricked?
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In order to setup the RAID on the R510, you should get a screen like below and hit Control-R to go into the RAID configuration portion of the BIOS (it's the firmware of the RAID controller, in reality.)
http://www.datacenterins.com/2013/07/how-to-configure-hardware-raid-on-dell.html
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-vXRm_GCGmlM/UdZVpMvFdZI/AAAAAAAAAE0/xAPJoIfNCl4/s1374/1.png
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To use a single drive as a single drive on a hardware RAID controller what you do is add it to a one drive RAID 0 set. Seems strange, but that is the only way to designate a single drive as a RAID in a RAID controller.
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@scottalanmiller Will do in the morning.
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@scottalanmiller Got the server correctly interfacing with the drive in RAID0, and apparently why it refused to work with the USB's and the BIOS was messing up, was apparently that it was trying to flash itself from the second one, while using the first as boot media? I don't know, but it was probably my fault. Now, though, that the HDD has been set up, it isn't recognizing the USB as boot media. Any suggestions? I don't know my way around servers really all that well, plain and simple.
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@Mike-Ralston You may find an option in the bios that enables or disables boot from USB. Should be somewhere in the boot settings menu.
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@coliver It recognized it as a boot device, all the way up to getting the HDD setup.
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@Mike-Ralston said:
@scottalanmiller Got the server correctly interfacing with the drive in RAID0, and apparently why it refused to work with the USB's and the BIOS was messing up, was apparently that it was trying to flash itself from the second one, while using the first as boot media? I don't know, but it was probably my fault. Now, though, that the HDD has been set up, it isn't recognizing the USB as boot media. Any suggestions? I don't know my way around servers really all that well, plain and simple.
Don't start thinking of it as a server. It is a PC just like any PC. All PCs are the same. It has a BIOS, it has drive(s), it has USB ports. For all intents and purposes, it is a desktop. There is nothing on your end that makes it behave differently because it is a server. Server vs. desktop is a human naming concept, not a technical one.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Mike-Ralston said:
@scottalanmiller Got the server correctly interfacing with the drive in RAID0, and apparently why it refused to work with the USB's and the BIOS was messing up, was apparently that it was trying to flash itself from the second one, while using the first as boot media? I don't know, but it was probably my fault. Now, though, that the HDD has been set up, it isn't recognizing the USB as boot media. Any suggestions? I don't know my way around servers really all that well, plain and simple.
Don't start thinking of it as a server. It is a PC just like any PC. All PCs are the same. It has a BIOS, it has drive(s), it has USB ports. For all intents and purposes, it is a desktop. There is nothing on your end that makes it behave differently because it is a server. Server vs. desktop is a human naming concept, not a technical one.
But the BIOS is all wonky, there's a ton of different levels of nonsensical text, and configuration menus that have nothing to do with their nomenclature.
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@Mike-Ralston That doesn't sound right... could you post a picture or something with the nonsensical text? If it is gibberish or something else then your BIOS may be corrupt, although didn't you try to flash it earlier in this thread?
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@Mike-Ralston said:
But the BIOS is all wonky, there's a ton of different levels of nonsensical text, and configuration menus that have nothing to do with their nomenclature.
That may be, but that's just a bad BIOS design, could happen anywhere, if that is the case.
So we had it booting to USB previously, correct? Did we have to do anything to get that to work before? What was just done that got us back to the working state that we have now? Last I knew the BIOS was hosed and you could not get into it. Has it been reset?
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According to this site, the boot from USB option only exists after the USB boot device is plugged in:
http://en.community.dell.com/support-forums/servers/f/956/t/19398864