Disk Utility shows 0,00 Bytes (0 Bytes) for 2.73 TB Array

I have an Xserve Raid connected to an Xserve G4 dual 1GHz 10.2.8 Server. I have had a 700 Meg Raid 5 volume for several years with no problems. I just purchased 7 500 GB ADMs to add to the second controller. I first upgraded the firmware to "firmware-1.5-1.50.xfb". I have tried recreating the Array 3 times with no success. Yes I have restarted the server many times and it shows the same thing every time. I would like to avoid upgrading the system software if possible. Here is a link to the Disk Utility screen shot.
http://homepage.mac.com/manor/XserveRaidFormat.jpg
Thanks for the help.
Xserve Raid   Mac OS X (10.2.x)  

IIRC your problem is 10.2.8. It can't deal with a volume of that size.
You should find that if you can format it (maybe on another machine) it will work, but you will get strange readings on volume sizes, space available, etc.
For example, I have a 2.2TB volume shared by NFS that reports as 187GB on a 10.2.8 system, with 600GB free - go figure.
Yet the same volume reports correctly on every other system.
I'm afraid you're going to have to upgrade the OS on the system to get this to work properly, or reduce the volume size so that it's less than 2TB.

Similar Messages

  • Disk Utility shows Disk1, not mounted, and no further information???

    Disk Utility shows my correct disk partitions in the top section (my hard disk with two partitions and my superdrive). In the lower section, however, there is a "disk1" which shows no information. Under that is another "disk1" which shows only 'Not mounted' for 'Mount Point:' and '0 Bytes' for 'Capacity'. All other lines only show dashes.
    I looked at my /Volumes folder in Terminal. It shows four entries:
    x MPBWinXP - which is my boot camp partition
    x MacBook Pro HD - which is my OS X partition
    x MacBackups-1 - which is an external drive on my network (for my Time Machine backups)
    x administrator's Public Folder - hunh?
    So, this "disk1" in my Disk Utility must represent one of the last two, I'm thinking. And, I'm thinking the last one isn't supposed to be there - or is it there because I shared it at some point, maybe?
    Any thoughts on this and what I might do to get rid of the "disk1" from my Disk Utility display?

    I never received a reply to this, so I'm marking it as 'answered' just to close it out.

  • I used a partitioned HDD for time machine, using a partition already containing other data files. I am now no longer able to view that partition in Finder. Disk Utility shows it in grey and "not mounted". Any suggestions of how to access the files?

    I used a partitioned HDD for time machine, using a partition already containing other data files. I am now no longer able to view that partition in Finder. Disk Utility shows it in grey and "not mounted". Any suggestions of how to access the files? Does using time machine mean that that partition is no longer able to be used as it used to be?
    HDD is a Toshiba 1TB, partitioned into two 500GB partitions.
    OS X version 10.9.2

    Yes, sharing a TM disk is a bad idea, and disks are cheap enough so that you don't need to.
    Now
    Have you tried to repair the disk yet

  • Trying to install 10.9 yields "damaged HD message," but disk utility shows everything is fine.

    Running mid-2010 MacBook Pro 13'' with OSX 10.7.5.
    So, like many who have tried to install the new update, mine says it cannot be installed due to a damaged Macintosh HD. Attempting to fix it through the Disk Utility available during the install allows me to Verify Disk. I get an error that it needs to be repaired, but the repair option is greyed out. Booting it into Recovery and using Disk Utility again shows a damaged disk, but this time I can repair it. It repairs and everything reads as fine; even verifying the disk again shows that the system is fine. This is where it gets screwy.
    Upon reboot, the Mavericks install wizard once more gives me the damaged HD message. It once more shows a damaged disk through the Maverick's screen Disk Utility. Booting it into recovery shows the damage again, is fixable again. Rinse, repeat.
    Booting into Safe Mode and running Disk Utility shows an undamaged Mac HD. It also allows me to access everything as normal (which is how I am on here now), albeit much more slowly. Additionally, my Boot Camp partition works just fine.
    I wouldn't mind abandoning the install, but the Mavericks install will not allow me to boot into my Mac HD because of some error. I also cannot avoid restarting into the Mavericks install wizard unless using Safe Mode. I attempted to delete the downloaded Mavericks "application" in the launch pad, but this does not affect my normal boot, and it appears again the next time I boot into Safe Mode.
    I don't know what's wrong with this, but I don't thing it's a hardware issue, because this only affects Mavericks. Can anyone tell me how to either 1) install Mavericks, or 2) banish this **** from whence it came so I can have my computer back? I've been trying to fix this for at least 9 hours, I'm starting to feel rather infuriated.
    The only option that I can think of at this point is to reformat and do a clean install of 10.9. Alternatively, maybe just keep 10.9 off my system because it seems to be a POS.

    Running mid-2010 MacBook Pro 13'' with OSX 10.7.5.
    So, like many who have tried to install the new update, mine says it cannot be installed due to a damaged Macintosh HD. Attempting to fix it through the Disk Utility available during the install allows me to Verify Disk. I get an error that it needs to be repaired, but the repair option is greyed out. Booting it into Recovery and using Disk Utility again shows a damaged disk, but this time I can repair it. It repairs and everything reads as fine; even verifying the disk again shows that the system is fine. This is where it gets screwy.
    Upon reboot, the Mavericks install wizard once more gives me the damaged HD message. It once more shows a damaged disk through the Maverick's screen Disk Utility. Booting it into recovery shows the damage again, is fixable again. Rinse, repeat.
    Booting into Safe Mode and running Disk Utility shows an undamaged Mac HD. It also allows me to access everything as normal (which is how I am on here now), albeit much more slowly. Additionally, my Boot Camp partition works just fine.
    I wouldn't mind abandoning the install, but the Mavericks install will not allow me to boot into my Mac HD because of some error. I also cannot avoid restarting into the Mavericks install wizard unless using Safe Mode. I attempted to delete the downloaded Mavericks "application" in the launch pad, but this does not affect my normal boot, and it appears again the next time I boot into Safe Mode.
    I don't know what's wrong with this, but I don't thing it's a hardware issue, because this only affects Mavericks. Can anyone tell me how to either 1) install Mavericks, or 2) banish this **** from whence it came so I can have my computer back? I've been trying to fix this for at least 9 hours, I'm starting to feel rather infuriated.
    The only option that I can think of at this point is to reformat and do a clean install of 10.9. Alternatively, maybe just keep 10.9 off my system because it seems to be a POS.

  • After i enter my password for the wifi in internet recovery mode it just shows a blank screen no disk utility shows why??? NEED HELP

    After i enter my password for the wifi in internet recovery mode it just shows a blank screen no disk utility shows why??? NEED HELP

    Enter your admin passwrod, not Wi-Fi network password.

  • Disk Utility Shows Incorrect Free Space

    I've had this problem for a while now, and I've been unable to figure out why. I can't even remember when it started, but it has become quite a nuisance.
    The Finder window shows that I have 302GB of harddrive space remaining, out of 500GB. The Activity Monitor and Disk Utility show I have 240GB space remaining, and my System Profiler shows I have 239GB remaining. I just deleted a bunch of old TV shows off of iTunes (about 40GB worth) to open up some space, but only the Finder changed (up to 302GB from 260GB) but the Activity Monitor, Disk Utility, and System Profiler haven't changed.
    Now, I'll assume the Finder is showing the correct amount of space, but I'm wondering why the other utilites are showing the incorrent amount of space. I have a feeling maybe something was screwed up when I created a 50GB Windows 7 partition through Boot Camp a couple months ago.
    I've attempted to Repair Disk through the Disk Utility and it says everything looks fine. Any solutions to this minor inconvenience? Or at least an answer as to why this is happening?

    The available disk space reported in finder is totally wrong.
    Even if it accounts for the local snapshots. In my macbook air it shows 120 Available in finder which is just 1GB less than my SSD capacity.
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4467217

  • Disk utility showing recover partition but not main partition

    I have a Macbook Pro A1278 that has been dropped.  I pulled the hard drive and ran seatools on it to verify it has no physical defects.  The disk utility shows the recovery partition but not the main partition.  It infrequently will boot to the users partition.  I usually get the flashing folder with a question mark in it.  What is the next step to try to backup the data on the drive and reinstall OS X.

    bendold wrote:
    I booted into the disk utility
    It would be really helpful if you would answer the question as I asked it
    Last time
    Did you do this from the Recovery mode (either Recovery mode, internet or local)
    Yes or No

  • How does disk utility decide which optical drive to use for burn?

    This is a somewhat daft question and purely out of interest.
    How does disk utility decide which optical drive bay to open for burning?
    I have two drives in a MacPro and both have the same capabilities (DVD-RW). Why does it sometimes open the lower one, and sometimes the top one?

    Grant Bennet-Alder wrote:
    The estimate is based on how long it already took to do how many blocks, and how many blocks are left to do. If you told it to overwrite 35 times, it will be a long, long time before it completes.
    The estimate is made grossly large by the presence of Bad Blocks that need to be Read during the test (not the case with Erase and Write Zeroes).
    Each Block is written with some redundancy bits, so that small errors can be corrected on reading. A Bad Block causes the drive to re-read. and re-read, and re-read, in hopes of getting correctable data the next time. This should NOT be an issue in writing. But if the drive stops responding (which can and does happen with a bad drive) the Erase function will just sit there, thinking it is making progress, and stretching out the time.
    Thanks, Grant.
    If I read your reply correctly, Erase and Zero Out free space shouldn't elongate the process, because there's no read occurring.
    The drive will not be Mounted while Disk Utility works on it, so it will not be on the Desktop. But ask Apple System Profiler \[ About this Mac > More Info > Serial ATA ] if the drive is still THERE . If it cannot be seen, you have your answer -- the drive dropped out of sight while being tested -- Bad Drive.
    Well, now I am confused. It's a FW800 drive. It's on the Desktop. And it appears under FireWire in System Profiler. AND Disk Utility shows a mount point. But the Unmount and Eject buttons are grayed out.
    Will the drive be mounted if it fails to respond to Disk Utility? That doesn't seem to make sense.
    How do I determine its status? It appears to be stuck at "1 day, 5 hours" but it'll take an hour for that to change. I think it's been that long since I first noticed the time.
    Harv

  • Have a mac book pro that crashed. ran disk utility to repair. comp booted and ran for short time. then crashed. ran repair again. disk utility said it could not repair files and i needed to format hard drive and start again. now nothing works

    have a mac book pro that crashed. ran disk utility to repair. comp booted and ran for short time. then crashed. ran repair again. disk utility said it could not repair disk and needed to format and start again.
    comp said it could not unmount disk and now when comp trys to boot all i get is a question mark on the screen. help

    Erase and Install
    1. Boot from your Snow Leopard Installer Disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button.  When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area.  If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing.  SMART info will not be reported  on external drives. Otherwise, click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Quit DU after formatting completes and return to the installer. Install Snow Leopard.
    5. After restart into Snow Leopard download and install Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1.

  • My MacBook Pro 13 inch makes a clicking noise from the hard drive and can not start up in safe mode and normal. I then ran disk utility in recovery mode and disk utility shows no problems with the hard drive. What is the problem?

    Please help me, I have a mid 2010 Mac book pro with a toshiba mk3266gsxf harddrive. It started making a clicking noise and then my computer crashed. I proceeded to boot in safe mode, but it doesn't work. When I ran disk utility in recovery mode, it showed no problem with my disk. Does any one know what the problem is?

    Sounds like a mechanical problem with the drive and it ruined the sectors where the Macintosh HD partition (and OS X, and files and programs) reside, but not your Recovery HD partition.
    If you held command option r while booting, that's Internet Recovery and it's loaded via the Internet, not via the Recovery HD partition on the boot drive, so that could mean the drive is dead mechanically or there is another issue.
    In either case the drive will likely have to be replaced, it's a matter of what occured to where and the drive state if you can recover data or not. If you made recent backups then your fine.
    My computer is not working, is my personal data lost?
    Most commonly used backup methods

  • My HD in disk utility shows free space of 200GB and is greyed out. I am unable to do anything with this free space.

    I dual booted my mac until recently with refind. It all worked fine until recently when i tried to remove the ubuntu partion as I did not need it any more.
    Unfortunately, I am now not able to do anything to the 200GB of free space that shows in disk utility. Please help.
    I use Yosemite now.

    worked it out. thanks:)

  • Can't find .dmg file Disk Utility shows is there

    I've been trying to clean up/gain space on my G4-12" PowerBook. In Disk Utility it shows a .dmg file that when mounted is an audio CD I received from a friend a couple of years ago. I imported the songs from it at the time, ejected, and that was that. Now I see in Disk Utility that this dmg holds ±500mb of space, but I can't find it to delete it. This is quite strange and never happened before. Find, Spotlight, EasyFind (including looking for invisibles), etc. cannot locate it. In Disk utility it shows the path as /Volumes/<name>, implying it is mounted. Upon clicking 'Open' it mounts the <AudioCD> which then shows up in the left side of my Finder windows. I can open this volume, click on a song and it plays, so it is clear that it does exist and not just an artifact. I can eject the AudioCD and it disappears. But I can't get to the .dmg file to make it go away.
    Any ideas on this are greatly appreciated as I've run out of paths to try....but I've not dipped into Terminal so would greatly prefer an alternative if it exists. Thanks in advance!

    Have you done a Find/Search using just dmg, rather than a search for the file name?
    To increase your HD's free space, look at these links.
    Where did my disk space go?
    http://www.macfixitforums.com/showflat.php?Cat=&Board=Forum38&Number=770243
    Download & use WhatSize described in this link or Disk Inventory X @ http://www.derlien.com/
    Freeing space on your Mac OS X startup disk
    http://www.thexlab.com/faqs/freeingspace.html
    Amazing Disappearing Drive Space
    http://www.pinkmutant.com/articles/TigerMisc.html
    Increase HD Free Space
    http://macosx.com/forums/howto-faqs/275191-how-easily-increase-hd-free-space-lap top.html
    How to free up my disk space
    http://www.macmaps.com/diskfull.html
     Cheers, Tom

  • RAID Admin and Disk Utility show different sizes

    Hello all,
    I have tried searching through these forums for a resolution to this, but did not really find one. Here is my situation:
    I have an XServe Dual G4 in a branch office. It has attached to it an XServe RAID. Last week, when I was down working in the office I added a new drive to the RAID. The lower channel on the RAID had 4 172GB drives in it, and I added a 5th and and told RAID admin to resize the RAID.
    The next day, the RAID was finished resizing. RAID admin was reporting that the array was now 690GB. However, after rebooting the server and RAID multiple times, Disk Utility in OS X is still showing that the Volume on the RAID is only 517GB.
    So, I have a couple of questions:
    1. How is it possible that by adding a 172GB drive to a RAID 5 array that was about 520GB I ended up with an array that is 690 GB? That would imply that there is no parity (since 690 - 520 = 170 and the drive I added in was 172GB).
    2. How do I get the server to see the additional space? The server is at the newest version of the OS and the RAID it as the newest version of the firmware.
    Please help.
    Mac OS X (10.4.8)

    I've run into the same issue with a newer PPC XServe. However, after I tried to reformat, I still only show up with the orginal size, and not the new size, even after I restarted the server and XRAID.
    Did you have any success with your reformat?

  • 'Disk Utility' showing 2 HDs...?

    When I click on Disk Utility it shows 2 Hard Drive icons; one saying Macintosh HD, the other 111.8 GB ST9120821A...also they have different text descriptions at the bottom of the Disk Utility window....?
    Should both of these items be listed ?

    Hi Robert,
    Steve is basically correct. The upper icon represents the entire disk and the lower, indented icon is the "volume". So Macintosh HD is your "volume".
    Note that 149.1 GB LaCie GroupSA is a "hard disk drive" and there are 2 volumes on this disk because it is "partitioned".
    Normally when running "Verify" or "Repair Disk" or "Repair Permissions" you would want to choose the volume.
    Refer to what Disk Utility tells you before you choose, "Select a disk, volume or image."
    Images like "zlock.dmg appear below the divider:
    Hope this helps.
    -mj
    [email protected]

  • Hard drive not identified during Installation. Disk Utility showing nothing in left side bar

    Some day before my Macbook pro shown the flashing question mark. I have tried to install thr OS Snow leopard using disc.
    When I started to install the OS, my start up disc ( Hard drive) is not showing for installation.
    I have gone through the Disk Utility to repair it, but in that  Hard drive is not showing in left side bar.
    Kindly suggest how can I recover my Hard drive to install the OS?

    That suggests that the drive is dead; if so, it needs to be replaced, and any data on it can only be recovered by a professional service, which can charge hundreds or thousands of dollars.
    (101654)

Maybe you are looking for