Dv7 Hard Drive slowdown problem

I have an HP dv7-1273cl laptop running Windows 7 and after about an hour of operation the hard drive slows to a crawl & then stops. The activity light stays lit and drive makes no noise. It recovers when I let it cool off. Is the hard drive shot?

Hi,
If the Hard Drive is starting to fail, I would strongly recommend backing-up all your personal files etc before trying the following procedure.
Shut down the notebook.  Tap away at f10 as you start the notebook to enter the bios menu.  Under the Advanced or Diagnostic tab you should find the facility to run tests on both the Hard Drive and Memory.  Post back with the details of any error messages.
If both the above tests pass, try the following.
From the Start Menu, open All Programs, open Accessories, right click the Command Prompt and select 'Run as Administrator'.  In to the prompt type the following command and hit enter.
sfc /scannow                 ( note that there is a space between sfc and the / )
Let the process complete, then type exit and hit enter.
Next, click the Start Menu, click Computer, left click Local Disc C once to highlight it, right click Local Disc C and select Properties.  Click the Tools tab and then click the button to 'Check the Drive for Errors'.  In the following window make sure both boxes are ticked and then click Start.  Agree to schedule the check at the next system restart and then restart the notebook - this process can take a couple of hours to complete before loading back into Windows.
Regards,
DP-K
****Click the White thumb to say thanks****
****Please mark Accept As Solution if it solves your problem****
****I don't work for HP****
Microsoft MVP - Windows Experience

Similar Messages

  • HP Pavillion DV7 Hard Drive failure and replacement

    Hi all,
    As the title mentions, I have an HP Pavillion DV7, p/n: NB406AV. The SMART is showing an imminent hard drive failure. The primary hard disk quick test stops at 4% and shows a code "303" for hard disk 1. It also stops at 4% when doing a full HD scan.
    So, I'll be replacing the HD. I have no idea what to buy, and I plan on buying a non HP HD. Can anyone tell me the specs I should look for? I'd like to get the biggest GB HD that will be compatible as well. Thanks for your help!

    Hi,
    It usesSATA HDD. Some dv7 models use SATA II but many later models use SATA III. SATA III is backwrd compatible but more expensive. DV7 is a series of hundreds different models and you won't go wrong with SATA III drive. It can accept current generation HDD's. The following HHD is a good choice with a good price/performance ratio per Gb:
       http://www.seagate.com/au/en/internal-hard-drives/laptop-hard-drives/laptop-solid-state-hybrid-drive...
    You can use 1Tb on your machine. New HDD's are thinner but the screws will be lined up and should be strong enough to hold the HDD in place.
    Regards.
    BH
    **Click the KUDOS thumb up on the left to say 'Thanks'**
    Make it easier for other people to find solutions by marking a Reply 'Accept as Solution' if it solves your problem.

  • Hp Envy Dv7 Hard Drive Test

    I have bought this Hp computer about 9 to 10 months ago and I have already got an issue with the computer. My computer is a Hp Envy Dv7. I tryed to start up my computer and it went extremely slow. I attempted to log into my account on my computer but nothing would work. I went to go check if any of my parts we failing which one of them is, the hard drive did not pass the "Hard Drive Short Dst Check". It gave me this failure Id: 9TWFTW-6B86R5-QFPK0K-60VU03
    I can't log into my computer, I don't know how to fix this problem please help.

    Hello, i'm owner of a HP Envy DV6 7280SL and, right now, i've encountered a problem with my hdd, it seem to be broken, is divided in two partitions, one containing a windows 7 system, and the other one with windows 8.
    Until now, both partitions had working perfectly but, from this morning, the partition with windows 8 mounted dosen't work. After a check, with the hp application for testing the hardware, the result of the HDD test is : failed.
    It report a failure id : 94LD51-6A06R5-QFPK0K-60TV03.
    Anyway, if i use the other partition ( the one with windows 7 mounted ...) everything is working ... in fact right now i'm using my notebook to write to you this post.
    I've read a lot of posts on this regards and most of them refer a problem that can be solved only changing the HDD.
    Could i solve this problem in another way or the only way is to change the HDD ?
    If the only solution is to change the HDD, i will buy an hdd that can improve the performance of my notebook, any suggestions on this regard ?
    I've give it a look to this : http://www.wdc.com/en/products/products.aspx?id=790
    Could you suggest something else avoiding the SSD due to the high price that they have at the moment ?
    Sorry for my english and thanks to anyone that will help me to solve this issue.
    Massimiliano.

  • Dv7 hard drive caddy cable

    Hello, I have a dv7 -1135nr and would like to add a second hard drive. I know i need the caddy and was wondering if i need a cable to? I f so does anyone know which caddy and cable I need and where to get them?
    Thank you, Greg
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    What you need is hard drive mounting kit, that will have the screws, the connector cable and caddy... it orderable from here... http://partsurfer.hp.com/Search.aspx?SearchText=60​5415-001
    Although I am an HP employee, I am speaking for myself and not for HP.
    Make it easier for other people to find solutions, by marking my answer with 'Accept as Solution', if it solves your problem.
    Click on the BLUE KUDOS button on the left to say "Thanks"

  • Hard drive formatting problem

    Hi there,
    I've been stupid and I'm looking for some advice.  What happened was I went and tried to install Windows 8.1 on my iMac, had a problem with the installation process and whilst in the Windows installer, I ended up screwing up a partition which has ended up as free space which OSX disk utility won't let me format, delete or repartition.  It won't work either from within Mavericks or when booted from either a recovery disk or a USB drive Mavericks installer.  I've got everything backed up so a complete hard drive format is fine, in fact I already tried that, so starting from scratch might be easiest. If anybody has any ideas how I could fix this I'd be grateful.
    At the moment the drive is showing four partitions, Macintosh HD is 2.5TB OS Extended (Journaled), disk1s4 is 314.6MB OS Extended (Journaled), disk1s6 is 134.2MB OS Extended (Journaled) and Free Space is 499.98GB Free Space.
    Macintosh HD is working fine.
    disk1s4 I'm unable to delete, merge or reformat.
    disk1s6 is between a rock and a hard place, because...
    Free Space is just flat out unusable.
    System is 27" iMac 3.5GHz Core i7, 16GB 1600 MHz DDR3, 3.12TB Fusion Drive
    Any help would be appreciated, I'll try not to screw up this time...
    Thanks,
    Kev

    Hi malevolus,
    It looks like the partition map of your iMac’s fusion drive is corrupted. Fortunately since you have a backup of everything, we don’t have to worry about data loss. Reformatting of a fusion drive does require some special steps though. See this article -
    Mac mini (Late 2012), iMac (Late 2012 and later): About Fusion Drive
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5446
    In Particular -
    Troubleshooting
    The version of Disk Utility that comes with Fusion Drive is unique. Earlier versions of Disk Utility can't be used with a Fusion Drive.
    If your system will not start because you see a flashing question mark or another alert:
    Press the Power button and hold it down to power off your system.
    Press the Power button again. After you hear the startup chime, press and hold Command-Option-R to start up to the Internet version of Mountain Lion Recovery.
    A globe should appear with a "Starting Internet Recovery" message. It is now OK to release Command-Option-R. 
    A progress bar should appear and Internet Recovery should start and ask you to select a language.
    Once you select a language, click Disk Utility in the window that appears and then click Continue.
    If your Fusion Drive can be fixed with Disk Utility, you'll see a Disk icon with red lettering. Click the disk icon.
    A dialog box appears offering to fix the Fusion Drive (shown above). Caution: Clicking Fix will erase your Fusion Drive. If you have a Time Machine backup of your Fusion Drive Mac, see Mac 101: Time Machine for information on how to restore from a Time Machine backup once the drive has been erased.
              8.  After the process is complete, the volume will change color to black. Quit Disk Utility, click Install Mac OS X, then click Continue to reinstall OS X                         Mountain Lion.
    Thanks for using Apple Support Communities.
    Best,
    Brett L

  • IPod hard drive crashing problems

    Sorry this is going to be long, as I want to give some background, because I would love to hear opinions about this:
    I had a 6th generation 160g iPod for just over 3 years. I was on vacation using it over a long weekend a week ago. I was listening to music and decided I was going to watch a Simpsons episode that I bought from the iTunes store and was in my "tv shows" section of my iPod.
    As I went to switch to the episode, the iPod froze black. I had been having issues with it randomly resetting itself or pausing during songs, so I thought it might be on its way out. - Sure enough when I did the reset it never booted back up. I tried several times. So when I got back home 2 days later and plugged it into my computer, I was not surprised that it still would not reboot.
    I was bummed. 3 years is not a long time when you spend that much money. I am broke right now and since I am a music fanatic, with a huge music library I was wondering how I was going to carry on. I cannot afford to buy a new iPod.
    My dear father came to my rescue and showed up at my house with a brand new 7th generation 160g iPod on Saturday evening, just as a nice jesture. - I let it sync up, went to bed. Sunday afternoon, I was taking my daughter to the park and I brought my iPod into the car. I noticed that much of the artwork was not popping up as I looked through both coverflow and sampled some songs in playlists. And when I went to try a video again... BAM, the iPod locked up and wouldn't reset, just like the old one.
    I thought... maybe this is a fluke, but how strange that a brand new iPod would crash again on legally purchased iTunes video. So after trying to get it to reset, I plugged it in and again, it would not reset and my computer would not recognize it. The hard-drive just wouldn't boot up.
    Then I thought... even though it wasn't plugged into my computer either time and I had used the old one for a while without syncing, maybe it was something on my computer... so I plugged it into my wife's laptop and it said "found new hardware" and then there was a new message saying something along the lines of "there is a problem with your new hardware and it cannot be installed".
    My dad had gotten the 2 year warranty, but since it wasn't even 24 hours, I went to Best Buy and brought them back the iPod. They checked it out and said "wow, it's rare that out of the box it would crash, but it's crashed" and they gave me a new one. - I asked them about the possibility of something corrupting it, but they said it was unlikely and they since it's a hard-drive, hard-drives crash.
    So on Sunday evening, I did the same routine, I synced my iPod. This time, I tried a little bit of music and a little bit of video without syncing my library and it worked... Then that night I let the whole thing sync.
    This morning (Monday) I took it to work and played some music while I dropped my daughter off, and all of a sudden all the artwork is gone again... I figured I deal with that later, because although it bothered me, at least it was playing song after song with no issue.
    I'm at work now and I was letting a playlist play on shuffle. It was working just find and was so happy to have an iPod back.
    Then I hit the menu button and it takes me back to "coverflow" (the last place I was browsing) and all of a sudden the sound starts buzzing and the whole thing locks up. It's stuck, so I go to reset it...
    And low & behold, it won't reset, like the hard-drive crashed AGAIN. This is the 3rd iPod in a row. I plugged it into my work computer, just to see if it would recognize it. (I downloaded the latest iTunes on there) It won't. Again it just won't reboot.
    Now the first one, I was having hard-drive troubles, and hadn't been synced in a while, so unfortunately I think the product just doesn't last very long.
    But now with 2 new ones, it's making me think that there could be a problem with something in my computer. But I can't imagine what. Everything is either ripped directly into iTunes from a CD, bought from the iTunes store or were WAV files I put into iTunes and converted to aac files. I am a musicians and don't believe in illegally downloading music and don't use torrents. I can't imagine what could corrupt anything I'm syncing.
    I have about 110g of music that I am trying to sync. And then some tv shows, which I don't always sync all of them. Most of them were purchased from iTunes, but I have a few that I took from DVD and converted and put into my iTunes.
    I have called the apple help line, but they want me to call them back when I'm at my computer at home and we can trouble shoot, even though I know they won't be able to help me, because my iPod won't be able to be read.
    I would love to get some opinions and help.
    Thank you,
    Paul.

    Okay, by looking at my previous posting in this forum, it has apparently only been 2 1/2 years since I got my last iPod.

  • Hard Drive Logon problems A20M

    I have a bit of a problem I hope I can resolve with your help.
    A friend of mine asked me to correct a few problems he was having with his A20M.  One of the problems was his ability to connect to the internet.  His laptop was had been set up to logon with a domain.  I took the laptop home and while troubleshooting a couple of the problems, needed to connect to the internet through my own home network.  To do that, I had to change the setting so it would connect through my network workgroup.  After setting it up, I had to reboot the laptop, and in doing so, when I tried to logon to the hard drive, I received an error message indication I needed to make sure the user name, pass word and domain were entered correctly before I could logon. 
    Prior to making the changes so I could use the laptop on my home network, ... during the logon process, the logon window that would open contained three entried (User/owners name, password, and domain name).  The users and domain names were already filled in, and the logon only required the entry of the correct password (which I have).
    After making the changes, ... during the logon process, the logon window that opened contained only two entried (User/owners name and password).  The users name was already filled in, and the logon only required the entry of the correct password.  The box for entering a Domain name was not present any more.
    Now, since the laptop is giving me the error message about needing to make sure a domain name is correct (and I'm not able to make a change to the domain), I've basically not able to logon to the computer any more.
    I've checked the BIOS and it show that all three areas that can be password protected have the password feature disabled.  I'm at a loss trying to figure out what steps to take to gain access to the laptop again.  I sure hope someone will be able to get me pointed in the right direction.
    Thanks in advance for anyone who can offer any input with my problem.
    disaksen 

    Hey Brandon.
    There are no screw extractors in that size
    Well actually there are but they are a special item like from camera/jeweler repair suppliers.
    I thought one solution might be to buy an extra screw and try to scrape all the plastic out from under the screw and then just buy an extra top cover on ebay. Is there any other way to do this?
    I don't think I'd go scraping around in there. That's a very small Phillips head screw and that's probably why it got stripped. I've done an extraction like this by fitting a jewelers straight slot screwdriver in there. (I've got 10 different sizes) It can help to cut a slot a with the backside of an Exacto knife or use a very fine Dremel wheel or Swedish file.
    Richard
    Message was edited by: spudnuty

  • MacBook Pro will not boot - have replaced hard drive and problem persists

    Macbook Pro Mid 2010
    4gb ram, 2.4 GHz Intel core 2 duo
    Originally when I received a folder with a flashing question mark upon startup, I assumed I had a failed hard drive. I went ahead and installed a new 500GB hard drive in my machine and installed OS X Snow Leopard. I upgraded to OS X Mavericks, and I had everything running properly. The next day, I went to startup and my Mac would not boot again. The dreaded folder and question mark were back.
    I'm wondering what else could be causing this problem? Is it something I can diagnose and repair myself or will I be better off taking it into someone at this point?
    Thank you!

    You can try replacing the hard drive cable...
    Have you tried resetting the PRAM and SMC?
    Does the hard drive boot when connected externally?

  • Hard Drive (Maybe) Problem - Help Please!!

    Hey guys. I got a 3rd Generation 15GB iPod. My hard drive is the problem here. When its not in action, very quietly but for surely, you can hear some high-pitched noises that usually don't occur. It sounds like a twitching sound, or twitchy sort of a sound (just as the word "twitchy" sounds like") What has gone wrong with my iPod? Thank you all!

    I have to mention that I am not a techician, I may not understand the reason behind, I could be wrong and my suggestion may not work in your case. But, I must say that all the suggestions I made are basically from my past experienece fixing more than 10 iPods (from my friends and family members). I do not and have no intention to make a suggestion purely from what I heard and read (otherwise I would indicate). These have been tested and proved to work in my cases. I also have to deal with iPod problems such as:-
    1. Sad iPod
    2. Folder with exclamation mark
    3. iPod failed to be recognized by the computer
    4. broken iPod with 'clicking' sound
    I can simply post a link from the apple article - which would suggest you to do a Reset and Restore actions, however, most of the users would agree with me that the iPod with the aforementioned problems would not able to get mounted with the computer. In that case, how could you do a Restore. Should I just suggest the user to send their iPods for repair?
    I have tried myself with different ways, and I discovered a trick to solve the above problems. First, we must understand what is the problem behind - in my opinion, the problem mainly caused by the head of HD of the iPod getting stuck at a certain point and unable to read the sector properly. If an iPod is an external Hard Disk, how are you going to fix it, I believe that all of us would suggest one to do a Reformat. Right, but unfortunately, the iPod could not be mounted, so what next? I find an interesting way - when the iPod is formatted in PC and connected with a Mac computer, it will "Force" mount, then why not do a Restore there. And once it has been completed, re-connect it with your original PC, and this time with the iPod being formatted to a different format, a window will pop up, indicating that it cant read the iPod and ask whether you would like to do a reformat. Then open the iPod updater and click Restore (back to PC version). Again, interestingly, it works the other way as well i.e. Mac's iPod fixed with a Window based PC.

  • Hard drive detection problem - PLEASE HELP!!!!

    I'm about at my wits end with this problem.  One of my drives crashed over the weekend, and since then the replacement drive never gets detected.  When I have the second drive installed, my computer never gets past the "Verifying DMI Pool Data", then says disk boot failure.  When I take out the second drive, my computer boots fine.  I've tried different jumper settings, thinking maybe i looked at the diagram backwards, disconnecting my DVD drive and putting the hard disk on the secondary IDE, and installing the new drive as the master and installing Windows on it, with the old drive as the slave.  Nothing has worked.  As soon as I connect a second hard drive, I get a disk boot failure.  I've checked the boot priority a hundred times, and it's correct.  In case it was a power supply problem, I removed everything except the two hard drives and some RAM, and that didn't fix anything.  I'm lost as to where to go from here.  My computer works fine without the second drive, but I need the second drive for gaming.
    I'm now thinking it may be the motherboard, because a couple things have happened over the last month.  First, all of a sudden I got a CMOS checksum error, then about a week and a half ago the onboard NIC died.  And when I installed the updated drivers and flashed the BIOS, on restart I received an error message saying something was wrong with the overclocking settings and had been reset to the default values.  The problem with that is I never overclock anything.   
    I'm not even sure the old drive actually crashed anymore.  I heard clicking coming from the computer, and when I all of a sudden lost access to the drive, I assumed it crashed.  But now that I am unable to get the brand new drive to work, I'm thinking I need to get a new motherboard.  I'm trying to avoid that as long as I can though because this one is only 5 months old.
    Would a possible solution be to just leave the master on IDE, and buy a SATA drive to use as a second disk?  Or does mixing IDE and SATA cause issues?
    Thanks for any help anybody may be able to offer.
    Anyway, here are my system specs:
    K8N Neo4 motherboard
    Athlon64 3200+
    2.5 GB RAM - 3x 512 and 1x 1GB stick
    Boot disk - Western Digital 120GB ATA 100 IDE
    Old Slave - Seagate 60GB ATA 100 IDE
    New Slave - Western Digital 120GB ATA 100 IDE
    NIC - Linksys 10/100
    DVD-RW - Mad Dog Multimedia
    DVD-ROM - Sony
    Graphics - GeForce 7800GTX
    Sound - Mad Dog Entertainer 7.1
    Power Supply - 420W

    Quote
    putting the hard disk on the secondary IDE, and installing the new drive as the master and installing Windows on it, with the old drive as the slave.
    Does the 2nd HD work then, were you able to boot up and install Windows?
    Does BIOS detect it?
    Have you tried a new IDE cable?
    Make sure that all the pins are properly in and not loose in the molex connector to the HD.
    Have you tried using the new drive alone on IDE-1 or 2?
    Have you tried clearing CMOS? remove P/S AC cord, press case power button a few times to drain remaining power then clearing CMOS buy way of the jumper.
    Quote
    I'm trying to avoid that as long as I can though because this one is only 5 months old
    Did you buy this MB new?
    If so you could RMA it.

  • Hard Drive Ejection Problem

    I have a 2 tb western digital external hard drive that ejects from my mac almost as soon as I put it in. I formatted through the mac disk utility with 2 partitions... one htfs for time machine and one fat for transfers between windows and mac. Now every time I plug in my hard drive it loads the time machine then immediately fails and gives me the disk was not ejected properly error right after. I cant see the drive in the disk utility but the fat partition works when I plug it into windows. It is really annoying can someone tell me whats going on ??? Please help.

    You may have a problem with that USB port.

  • [SOLVED] Arch won't mount my hard drives correctly, problems at boot.

    Sometimes (only sometimes) Arch Linux will have an error during bootup because my Linux drive gets mounted as sdb instead of sda. My NTFS Sata storage drives gets mounted in its place as sda.
    When this happens, Arch Linux will stop booting at the "checking filesystems" step:
    :: Checking Filesystems [BUSY]
    /dev/sda3:
    The superblock could not be read or does not describe a corect ext2
    filesystem. If the device is valid and it really contains an ext2
    filesystem (and not swap or ufs or something else), then the superblock
    is corrupt, and you might try running e2fsck with an alternate superblock:
    e2fsck -b 8193 <device>
    [FAIL]
    **************** FILESYSTEM CHECK FAILED ****************
    * Please repair manually and reboot. Note that the root *
    * file system is currently mounted read-only. To remount *
    * it read-write type: mount -n -o remount,rw / *
    * When you exit the maintenance shell the system will *
    * reboot automatically. *
    Give root password for maintenance
    (or type Control-D to continue):
    And from there i have to remount my drives manually or restart the computer. Everytime I start the computer, I simply have to hope that my Linux drive will mount as sda. It's totally hit and miss.
    Now, I know that my superblock is not corrupt. fsck is failing because it is looking for my linux filesystem on sda. It is encountering my NTFS Sata drive on sda instead of the expected Linux ext filesystem.
    So how do I know that this is happening?
    Well, after giving the root password, it shows the root prompt
    [root@(none) ~]#
    and i proceed to use the lshw command to see what's up with the drives:
    [root@(none) ~]# lshw -short | grep /dev/
    /0/6/0.0.0 /dev/sdb disk 120GB WDC WD1200JB-00E
    /0/6/0.0.0/1 /dev/sdb1 volume 101MiB Linux filesystem partition
    /0/6/0.0.0/2 /dev/sdb2 volume 258MiB Linux swap volume
    /0/6/0.0.0/3 /dev/sdb3 volume 7506MiB EXT4 volume
    /0/6/0.0.0/4 /dev/sdb4 volume 104GiB EXT4 volume
    /0/6/0.1.0 /dev/sdc disk 81GB Maxtor 6Y080P0
    /0/6/0.1.0/1 /dev/sdc1 volume 76GiB Windows NTFS volume
    /0/8/0.0.0 /dev/sda disk 640GB Hitachi HDT72106
    /0/8/0.0.0/1 /dev/sda1 volume 596GiB Windows NTFS volume
    So, clearly, this shows that my Linux drive has gotten mounted as sdb and my NTFS Sata drive has gottem mounted as sda. It's totally random: sometimes they mount vice versa and the system boots just fine.
    When Arch does happen to mount itself properly as sda and the system starts successfully, then the lshw command shows this:
    [root@(none) ~]# lshw -short | grep /dev/
    /0/6/0.0.0 /dev/sda disk 120GB WDC WD1200JB-00E
    /0/6/0.0.0/1 /dev/sda1 volume 101MiB Linux filesystem partition
    /0/6/0.0.0/2 /dev/sda2 volume 258MiB Linux swap volume
    /0/6/0.0.0/3 /dev/sda3 volume 7506MiB EXT4 volume
    /0/6/0.0.0/4 /dev/sda4 volume 104GiB EXT4 volume
    /0/6/0.1.0 /dev/sdb disk 81GB Maxtor 6Y080P0
    /0/6/0.1.0/1 /dev/sdb1 volume 76GiB Windows NTFS volume
    /0/8/0.0.0 /dev/sdc disk 640GB Hitachi HDT72106
    /0/8/0.0.0/1 /dev/sdc1 volume 596GiB Windows NTFS volume
    The above correctly mounted format shows the drives in the same order as my Hard Disk boot priority in BIOS as well as in the same order as during the initial drive detection directly following the memory test (don't know if it has anything to do with it though).
    So my question is this. How do I ensure that Arch Linux mounts itself as sda ALL of the time, and not randomly?
    Or should I remove my sda entries in etc/fstab and let Arch determine where my Linux filesystems are? If so, how?
    It's interesting to note that GRUB is set to boot Arch Linux from hd0, which should be sda.
    It's also intriguing to note that if I take out my Sata drive, I never encounter this problem.
    Last edited by trusktr (2010-06-15 07:49:31)

    Thanks kgas, here's what i found out so far:
    Alright so after rebooting, this is what i determined:
    When Linux mounts the drives incorrectly (take note of the parts in bold, the short numbers are NTFS filesystems, long numbers the Linux filesystems):
    [trusktr@rocketship ~]$ ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid
    total 0
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 01CA836D8BE82040 -> ../../[b]sdc1[/b]
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 0ddf0e41-e7e6-4af5-b0e9-bc79a91b12eb -> ../../[b]sdb1[/b]
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 92b88528-dd0f-4c1b-bcce-54084ef2aceb -> ../../[b]sdb4[/b]
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 C838CF5838CF4462 -> ../../[b]sda1[/b]
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 cdb33de5-0100-4c5f-a9b1-5c1a444e6eac -> ../../[b]sdb3[/b]
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 d0a5d49d-169d-43ce-af0f-216dc4a9f604 -> ../../[b]sdb2[/b]
    So an NTFS filesystem is mounted in sda instead of the Linux filesystem
    When Linux mounts everything properly:
    [trusktr@rocketship ~]$ ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid
    total 0
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 01CA836D8BE82040 -> ../../[b]sdb1[/b]
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 0ddf0e41-e7e6-4af5-b0e9-bc79a91b12eb -> ../../[b]sda1[/b]
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 92b88528-dd0f-4c1b-bcce-54084ef2aceb -> ../../[b]sda4[/b]
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 C838CF5838CF4462 -> ../../[b]sdc1[/b]
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 cdb33de5-0100-4c5f-a9b1-5c1a444e6eac -> ../../[b]sda3[/b]
    lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 10 Jun 14 21:08 d0a5d49d-169d-43ce-af0f-216dc4a9f604 -> ../../[b]sda2[/b]
    This doesn't tell us much except that I indeed do have uuid's for all the drives.
    So, i guess as kgas said, i probably need to use the uuid in fstab so that Linux always knows which hard drive is the linux drive! In that case, only the uuid for the Linux drive will be necessary. For the other drives it wouldn't matter so much i guess since they don't contain the operating system.
    Alright, i'll be back to determine if this fixes it!
    Last edited by trusktr (2010-06-15 06:41:25)

  • New hard drive and problems with sync

    My problem is that I have installed a new hard drive (Win 7)  which I installed itunes on and I cannot sync my ipod. I still have my old hard drive (windows XP) with the original itunes on it and I have tried to back it up but it still wont do it. 
    I can boot to XP and perform a back up but re-booting to Win7 and trying to restore it dosent work and I still get the syncing issue. I find the suggestion to erase my ipod and reinstall my music, a ridiculous solution and I'm guessing there is an "easy button" somewhere?
    help!

    I probably should have mentioned this twist. My music is on a seperate drive. So what I have is Win7 on SSD1, WinXP on 2nd drive and media on a 3rd drive.
    I backed up my media on both OS's and they seem to conflict with or do not recognize each other. Installing all my music on my SSD along with my Win7 is not an option (too small).
    thanks

  • Hard Drive Format Problem

    I wanted to move my Aperture Library to an external Hard Drive but when I select it it tells me it has an unsupported file system. My iPhoto Library happily resides on a HD with the same file system so I did not expect this problem.
    The HDD is a Samsung S2 Portable USB 640GB HDD. If I try to format it as Mac OS Extended whether journaled or not, Disk Utility fails to format these HDD but it is able to format them as MS-DOS (Fat). This is not a problem for iPhoto but Aperture will not accept it.
    Any suggestions as to how I can make this work either by forcing the HDD to accept Mac OS Extended or by forcing Aperture to accept the Fat 32 file structure? Having bought two of the HDD I cannot afford now to buy any more. I needed the HDD to be a 2.5inch portable so that I can take it with me as I travel and my MacBook Pro HDD is too small for the job at 320 and has less than 100GB of free space even 500 would be too small)

    I may not have formatted hundreds but certainly a couple of dozen, although I have always had more than one partition. These HDD are ultra small even for 2.5inch HDD. I had two of them which iPhoto accepted as FAT32 for iPhoto Library and back up so bought two to work with Aperture but Aperture will not support anything other than Mac OS Extended. So the fault if any, could also be said to be Apple's since Apple software normally works fine with FAT 32 formatted hard drives. Whatever is going on it is annoying.
    These are the Samsung HDD in question:
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822152200
    The customer reviews tend to happy with performance but complain unreasonably about getting 'only 596GB' when they paid for 640 which is an indication that a lot of people still get confused about disk capacity conventions.

  • Hard drive permissions problems

    My Mac Pro has four internal drives plus a fifth, external drive. I keep running into error messages about “you don’t have permission to do that.” Here are the five drives and their permissions:
    Macintosh HD (internal drive)
    thomaskehoe – Read only
    system – Read & Write
    wheel – Read only
    everyone – Read only
    SSD (start-up drive, internal)
    system – Read & Write
    wheel – Read only
    everyone – Read only
    Documents HD (internal drive)
    thomaskehoe – Read & Write
    tdk (Me) - Read & Write
    system – Read & Write
    admin – Read & Write
    everyone – Read only
    2TB HD (internal drive, Time Machine only)
    thomaskehoe – Read only
    staff – Read only
    everyone – Read only
    Videos 2010 (external drive)
    tdk (Me) - Read & Write
    staff – Read only
    everyone – Read only
    When I open the “Users & Groups” System Preference panel I see three accounts:
    Thomas David Kehoe (current user) - Admin
    Thomas Kehoe - Admin
    Guest User – Sharing only
    But the hard drives list the following seven accounts:
    thomaskehoe
    tdk (Me)
    system
    admin
    staff
    wheel
    everyone
    Lots of questions:
    - Why doesn’t SSD (the startup-drive) show my account? Is Lion somehow running on Macintosh HD even though SSD is set as the start-up disk? From the speed of start-up it seems to be starting from the SSD. The desktop icons have Macintodsh HD as the top icon.
    - Am I “thomaskehoe” or “tdk (Me”)? Are these accounts? If not, what are they?
    - I appear to be “Thomas David Kehoe – Admin,” not “Thomas Kehoe – Admin.” Should I get rid of the latter account?
    - I understand that “everyone” isn’t an account.
    - “admin,” “wheel,” and “staff” seem to be different ways of saying “group,” which isn’t an account. Why do different hard drives have different names for this?
    - “system” seems to be on every drive that has an operating system, so that’s not an account either.
    - Should I set every permission to “Read & Write” except “everyone”?
    - Should I run Disk Utility > First Aid > Verify Disk Permissions and Repair Disk Permissions? I ran this on SSD and it found lots of stuff to repair.
    iTunes and iPhoto seem to be the apps that have the most problems with permissions.

    Thomas Kehoe wrote:
    Macintosh HD (internal drive)
    thomaskehoe – Read only
    system – Read & Write
    wheel – Read only
    everyone – Read only
    SSD (start-up drive, internal)
    system – Read & Write
    wheel – Read only
    everyone – Read only
    Documents HD (internal drive)
    thomaskehoe – Read & Write
    tdk (Me) - Read & Write
    system – Read & Write
    admin – Read & Write
    everyone – Read only
    2TB HD (internal drive, Time Machine only)
    thomaskehoe – Read only
    staff – Read only
    everyone – Read only
    Videos 2010 (external drive)
    tdk (Me) - Read & Write
    staff – Read only
    everyone – Read only
    When I open the “Users & Groups” System Preference panel I see three accounts:
    Thomas David Kehoe (current user) - Admin
    Thomas Kehoe - Admin
    Guest User – Sharing only
    But the hard drives list the following seven accounts:
    thomaskehoe
    tdk (Me)
    system
    admin
    staff
    wheel
    everyone
    You are getting groups and accouunts confused. You have 2 admin accounts, either because you created them or because you used Migration Assistant after Setup Assistant, instead of on your first boot. The Guest user is standard from 10.6. It is an account that can be used by guests and will preserve no data created after use and return to default.
    - Why doesn’t SSD (the startup-drive) show my account? Is Lion somehow running on Macintosh HD even though SSD is set as the start-up disk? From the speed of start-up it seems to be starting from the SSD. The desktop icons have Macintodsh HD as the top icon.
    Easy way to find out Apple Menu > About this Mac > Startup Disk.
    - Am I “thomaskehoe” or “tdk (Me”)? Are these accounts? If not, what are they?
    - I appear to be “Thomas David Kehoe – Admin,” not “Thomas Kehoe – Admin.” Should I get rid of the latter account?
    You're asking me? If you have everything you need in “Thomas David Kehoe – Admin,” then, yes you can delete the other account.
    - Should I set every permission to “Read & Write” except “everyone”?
    Nooo. Don't do that!
    When you "Get Info" (command-i) on the you should have "Ignore ownership" at the bottom NOT checked.
    Although, this may not be an option on internals.
    - Should I run Disk Utility > First Aid > Verify Disk Permissions and Repair Disk Permissions? I ran this on SSD and it found lots of stuff to repair.
    You can. As long as it reports "Permissions have been repaired" you're good to go. No need to run it more than once, it won't change. Read this.

Maybe you are looking for