There's no such thing as a stupid question, but they're the easiest to answer.
JoinTour
Login
 
Hardware
Tag Cloud
audio blue screen boot bsod computer connection crash dell drivers dvd email error excel firefox freeze graphics hard drive harddrive hardware hijackthis install internet itunes keyboard laptop malware monitor motherboard network outlook outlook 2007 problem registry cleaner registry cleaners router screen slow sound trojan upgrade usb video virus vista windows windows 7 windows vista windows xp wireless word
Search
Search in:
 
Advanced Search
Tech Support Guy Forums > Software & Hardware > Hardware >
RAID 1 partitioning problem

Tip: Click Here to Update All Your PC's Outdated Drivers
[ Sponsored Link ]

Closed Thread
 
Thread Tools
hardlyworking's Avatar
Computer Specs
Junior Member with 4 posts.
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Experience: Intermediate
05-Oct-2008, 05:44 PM #1
RAID 1 partitioning problem
I'm a noobie and have little knowledge regarding partitioning and don't want to spend hours looking through posts for the solution to what is probably a simple problem. I have Windows Vista Ultimate 64-bit and I have a RAID 1 setup - C: is my main drive and D: is Recovery. They should be identical, but recently C: is showing a volume capacity of 365.05 GB (OK) but D: is showing a volume capacity of 7.55 GB, volume free space of 602.83 MB and volume used space of 6.96 GB. C: has a partition starting offset of 32,256 bytes; D: has a partition starting offset of 391,967,493,120 bytes. Can someone walk me through the steps to get the RAID partitioning back to normal?
Thanks!
crjdriver's Avatar
Computer Specs
Moderator with 19,857 posts.
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Reno, NV
05-Oct-2008, 06:55 PM #2
OK, I am not understanding your post at all.

1 Are you sure you in-fact have a raid array?
2 Partitions are part of the array. What does disk management show for your array? Post a screenshot of DM.
3 Are you by chance calling the two drives of the array C & D? If so, this is not correct. C, D, etc refer to partitions of the array not separate drives that make up the array.
__________________
Microsoft MVP Desktop Experience

Last edited by crjdriver : 05-Oct-2008 07:01 PM.
hardlyworking's Avatar
Computer Specs
Junior Member with 4 posts.
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Experience: Intermediate
05-Oct-2008, 07:55 PM #3
Sorry for the confusion. I will include the applicable info from Disk Manager:

Volume: HP(C
Layout: Simple
Type: Basic
File System: NTFS
Status: Healthy (System, Boot, Page File,Active, Crash Dump,Primary Partition
Capacity: 149.05 GB
Free Space: 135.36 GB
% Free: 91%
Fault Tolerant: No

Volume: Recovery(D
Layout: Simple
Type: Basic
File System: NTFS
Status: Healthy (Primary Partition)
Capacity: 7.55 GB
Free Space: 903 MB
% Free: 12%
Fault Tolerant: No

Info from System information report for disks shows:
Description: Disk drive
Manufacturer: (Standard disk drives)
Model: RAID1
Bytes/Sector: 512
Media Type: Fixed hard drive
Partitions: 2
SCSI Bus: 0
SCSI Logical Unit: 0
SCSI Port: 0
Sectors/Track: 63
Size: 372.60 GB (400,077,619,200 bytes)
Total Cylinders: 48,640
Total Sectors: 781,401,600
Total Tracks: 12,403,200
Tracks/Cylinder: 255
Partition: Disk #0, Partition #0
Partition Size: 365.05 GB (391,967,460,864 bytes)
Partition Starting Offset: 32,256 bytes
Partition: Disk #0, Partition #1
Partition Size: 7.55GB (8,110,126,080 bytes)
Partition Starting Offset: 391,967,493,120 bytes)

I hope that makes things a little clearer.
crjdriver's Avatar
Computer Specs
Moderator with 19,857 posts.
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Reno, NV
05-Oct-2008, 08:51 PM #4
OK, I am not understanding your problem. You have a raid array with a C partition and a recovery partition ie D. Where is the problem? Next you have not posted a screenshot of disk management.
crjdriver's Avatar
Computer Specs
Moderator with 19,857 posts.
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Reno, NV
05-Oct-2008, 08:58 PM #5
BTW this is what a screenshot of disk management looks like.
Attached Thumbnails
raid-1-partitioning-problem-screenshot.jpg  
hardlyworking's Avatar
Computer Specs
Junior Member with 4 posts.
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Experience: Intermediate
05-Oct-2008, 09:20 PM #6
The problem is that the Recovery partition D is almost maxed out and the partition offset is way too high. Screenshot is attached. I have run error checking and defrag on D to no avail. Partition D should be identical to C, right?
Attached Thumbnails
raid-1-partitioning-problem-capture.jpg  
crjdriver's Avatar
Computer Specs
Moderator with 19,857 posts.
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Reno, NV
05-Oct-2008, 09:31 PM #7
No. You are not understanding. You have two physical drives that make up a raid1 array. That array is approx 372gig or so. 365 is used for C and the rest is the recovery partition.

If you think D should be the same size as C, that is incorrect. You have one partition [C] that is usable; D is simply the recovery partition.

With raid1, the array is only as big as the smallest drive that makes up the array. As an example if you had an 80gig drive and a 40gig drive that made up a raid1 array, the array would be 40gig. If it were raid0, it would be 80gig [2X the smallest drive]

In your case, you have 2 400gig drives in raid1. Your array would be 372gig. The other 28gig is lost due to the different ways of measuring drive size. The drive maker uses one way and the os uses another [binary]

In short, you have no problem.
__________________
Microsoft MVP Desktop Experience
crjdriver's Avatar
Computer Specs
Moderator with 19,857 posts.
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Reno, NV
05-Oct-2008, 09:35 PM #8
BTW raid for the average user is just about useless. Raid1 is not a backup plan. It is only hardware redundant. It does noting for a virus, malware, corrupted driver install, etc. Every error is mirrored on the other drive. In short the only good it does is allows you to have a drive failure and not lose any data. You can simply replace the failed drive and rebuild the array.

If you are not backing up your data/work files, you are asking for data loss. Remember data you do not backup is data you do not care about.
__________________
Microsoft MVP Desktop Experience
hardlyworking's Avatar
Computer Specs
Junior Member with 4 posts.
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Experience: Intermediate
05-Oct-2008, 09:51 PM #9
Thanks for the explanation. Previously, I could have sworn that both volumes showed near the identical size. Plus, the Recovery (D space used was showing a red bar, which led me to believe there was a problem. Sorry for being technically challenged.

BTW, I do have scheduled backups on an external drive.
crjdriver's Avatar
Computer Specs
Moderator with 19,857 posts.
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Reno, NV
05-Oct-2008, 10:04 PM #10
You may have a problem with one of the drives in the array however your partitions are correct. Most system builders hide the recovery partition however in this case I guess it was not done.

You can test the drive[s] with the drive maker's diagnostic. You download this from whomever made the drive; ie WD, Seagate, etc. It runs from bootable media; CD or floppy.
__________________
Microsoft MVP Desktop Experience
Closed Thread Bookmark and Share

THIS THREAD HAS EXPIRED.
Are you having the same problem? We have volunteers ready to answer your question, but first you'll have to join for free. Need help getting started? Check out our Welcome Guide.


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
WELCOME TO TECH SUPPORT GUY! Are you looking for the solution to your computer problem? Join our site today to ask your question -- for free! Our site is run completely by volunteers who want to help you solve your computer problems. See our Welcome Guide to get started.

Thread Tools


You Are Using:
Server ID
Advertisements do not imply our endorsement of that product or service.
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:25 PM.
Copyright © 1996 - 2009 TechGuy, Inc. All rights reserved.
Powered by vBulletin, Copyright © 2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.2.0
Powered by Cermak Technologies, Inc.