plant Posted November 17, 2020 Share Posted November 17, 2020 (edited) I finally switched from BIOS to UEFI and was bale to get the flash drive to boot but I keep getting a failed to allocate memory error. I tried running the memtest and got the same error. I tried taking two fo the three memory sticks out but same error persisted. I also tried moving the USB port a couple times but nothing seems to work. Total newb here but I did just put it in an old laptop and it booted up first time. How can I figure out why my Dell r210 won't work? Is there a specific config I need for the Dell r210 ii? https://imgur.com/jexG6D8 Edited November 17, 2020 by plant adding image of error Quote Link to comment
plant Posted November 17, 2020 Author Share Posted November 17, 2020 I am working on trying to update the BIOS and everything today just in case. I have seen others using Poweredge Servers so I am a little confused. How can I view the logs to see the issue? Allocating memory seems like a weird error. Quote Link to comment
plant Posted November 25, 2020 Author Share Posted November 25, 2020 OK I will switch to FreeNAS I guess. Quote Link to comment
trurl Posted November 25, 2020 Share Posted November 25, 2020 On 11/16/2020 at 11:58 PM, plant said: I finally switched from BIOS to UEFI and was bale to get the flash drive to boot but I keep getting a failed to allocate memory error. I tried running the memtest and got the same error. Do you mean memtest itself actually said it failed to allocate memory? Memtest is a totally separate bootup and is not at all related to Unraid, it is basically the same as other memtest utilities you can download. 25 minutes ago, plant said: OK I will switch to FreeNAS I guess. If you are having a memory problem it won't matter what you try to run. Quote Link to comment
plant Posted November 25, 2020 Author Share Posted November 25, 2020 Well, after most of my tinkering and reading another post on this wiki it seems that syslinux is not running correctly for some reason. I have booted into FreeDOS, CentOS, Ubuntu or even Windows without any issues with memory. I even ran memory tests not using UnRaid Boot loader and had no errors. Seems to be something with the way syslinux is trying to allocate memory. Quote Link to comment
trurl Posted November 25, 2020 Share Posted November 25, 2020 On 11/16/2020 at 11:58 PM, plant said: I finally switched from BIOS to UEFI Some details missing here. Do you mean it booted when you changed the BIOS to boot UEFI and also changed the Unraid boot flash to boot UEFI? Do you mean it wasn't booting with the BIOS set to boot legacy and the Unraid boot flash set to boot legacy? Or did you have BIOS configured one way and the Unraid flash configured the other? Quote Link to comment
plant Posted November 29, 2020 Author Share Posted November 29, 2020 On 11/25/2020 at 2:54 PM, trurl said: Some details missing here. Do you mean it booted when you changed the BIOS to boot UEFI and also changed the Unraid boot flash to boot UEFI? Do you mean it wasn't booting with the BIOS set to boot legacy and the Unraid boot flash set to boot legacy? Or did you have BIOS configured one way and the Unraid flash configured the other? To clarify, when I used default settings on USB creator and left the server booting through BIOS and told it to boot to the USB drive nothing would happen. The screen would show the last command from the BIOS follow by an empty cursor like it was waiting. So, I tried configuring the USB for UEFI, and changed my boot to UEFI instead of BIOS and that is where I would get the error "Failed to allocate memory" and even trying to run the memory check it would show the same "failed to allocate memory" error. I did validate that when I use another computer the USB would boot to the Unraid setup so it seemed to be something with my server. I spend a few days figuring out how to upgrade my BIOS which didn't change my results. After finding the article above, I did try replacing the syslinux folder on the USB as well but that did not work either and I am a little past my knowledge on that one. I also tried using BETA release, removing memory down to one stick, but I also ran memcheck on CentOS and it came back good. Quote Link to comment
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