LooZypher Posted March 5, 2014 Share Posted March 5, 2014 Hi all. I'm in a bit of a pickle... My motherboard died, and took my flash drive with it, now; my 3 disks spin up (I only have the free version for now), and they sound healthy enough. I'm now hoping to that downloadning a new Copy of the free version, and plugging that into the new motherboard would solve my predicament. What am I asking? Well does a new Copy of unRaid recognize my disks, and the data on them, or am I pretty much screwed? L Quote Link to comment
garycase Posted March 5, 2014 Share Posted March 5, 2014 If your disks are still good, you can plug them into any computer that will boot UnRAID and you'll be fine. Since you're going to also be using a fresh install of UnRAID on a new flash drive, you DO need to be careful about which drives you assign as data & parity -- assigning a data drive as parity would destroy the data on it. So ... plug the drives into a new PC. Boot to your new UnRAID flash drive. Assign ONE drive as a data drive; then Start the array. If it tells you the drive is not formatted, STOP !! Do a New Config and assign a different drive as the only data drive. Start the array and confirm it's a good data drive (A data drive will NOT require formatting). Then Stop the array and add another drive as the 2nd data drive. Start the array again and confirm you've got the right two drives assigned (i.e. UnRAID does NOT want to format them). Now that you've got both data drives assigned and working, you can assign the 3rd drive as parity, and let the system do its initial parity sync. Done Quote Link to comment
LooZypher Posted March 5, 2014 Author Share Posted March 5, 2014 ... Man that's a stone from my heart right there, thank's man My parity drive is a 3TB WD Red and my two data disks are 1TB Seagate something... So that shouldn't be much of a hassle (I will be carefully though)... Thank you again Quote Link to comment
garycase Posted March 5, 2014 Share Posted March 5, 2014 Glad to help. Clearly you know exactly which drive to assign as parity, so it's even easier than I outlined -- just boot; assign the drives; and start the array Quote Link to comment
dgaschk Posted March 6, 2014 Share Posted March 6, 2014 It's simpler to assign all drives a data drives. The unformatted drive is parity. Quote Link to comment
garycase Posted March 6, 2014 Share Posted March 6, 2014 It's simpler to assign all drives a data drives. The unformatted drive is parity. True if there's any doubt. But with a KNOWN 3TB parity drive and 2 1TB data drives, there's certainly no doubt about which is which Quote Link to comment
LooZypher Posted March 6, 2014 Author Share Posted March 6, 2014 It's simpler to assign all drives a data drives. The unformatted drive is parity. Sounds easy enough, but with the free version you can only assign two data drives and one parity. Thanks for the tip, it could come in handy in the future Quote Link to comment
LooZypher Posted March 6, 2014 Author Share Posted March 6, 2014 Update: It's up and running again (not that I had any doubt) It was really easy too; no hassel, and no nasty surprises!... And it had that same clean feel to it, as when you do a clean install on any other system, if you catch my drift Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Quote Link to comment
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