Help deploying SCCM to a Hybrid Drive

Hi guys I have a HP 820 that has a 500GB spinning disk and a 32GB flash disk and I have not been able to work out how to deploy SCCM to it. I can load the SATA drivers and loan windows with the HP CD but SCCM just fails as soon as it partitions. Has anyone
deployed to these already? If so can you point me in the right direction?

Turns out that it needed a few things.
1. Get new SATA driver from Intel as HP's do not work.
2. Secure Erase (In BIOS) both Disks (500GB and 32GB). Who knows why this is and if anyone does know please post here!
3. Add a format task to SCCM to only format Disk 0 if it is above 40Gb and then another step for Disk 1 with same rule.
Hi sevengs,
How do i add a format task with the rule? Appreciate your reply. Thanks.
EC
Eng Chai

Similar Messages

  • PLEASE HELP me select new internal hard drive for Macbook Pro 2012 (non-retina)

    Good afternoon.
    I just bought a Macbook Pro 2012 (non-retina) 15 inch from a friend.  I think it is running Mountain Lion (has not been upgraded to Mavericks yet), and has iLife on it.  It came with the stock 500 gb 5400 rpm internal hard drive.  At home, I only have the Snow Leopard OS installation Cds and a copy of iLife 2011 installation Cds.  I am going to buy 16 gb of RAM from Other World Computing to install.
    I want to replace the hard drive with a 1 tb hard drive, preferably something that is $100 or less.
    I talked to Other World Computing (OWC) and looked at the Data Doubler Option to replace the optical drive with a Solid State drive, but decided that for now I want to keep the optical drive inside the computer for portability issues.
    I know that Solid State drives are better, but they are still too small, and I want the ease and portability of a 1 tb size INSIDE my computer.
    Initially I was going to order this from Other World Computing: 1.0TB 2.5" HGST Travelstar 7K1000 7200RPM SATA 6Gb/s 9.5mm Notebook Drive 32MB Cache. *'New' Factory Replacement with 2+ Year HGST Warranty*    As of April 4, 2014 it's on sale for $79
    But then I started reading some of the discussions online and thought maybe I should get a hybrid solid state drive?
    I saw on Amazon the Seagate 1TB Solid State Hybrid Drive SATA 6Gbps 64MB Cache 2.5-Inch ST1000LM014  It's on sale for $94.
    But according to some reviews, this Seagate has a platter that is only 5400rpm, unlike the previous Seagate Momentum that has a platter speed of 7200rpm.
    How reliable are the Seagate, versus a Toshiba or Western Digital or Hitachi or something else?
    Here are my questions about replacing the hard drive:
    1.  Is a hybrid solid state drive going to need some kind of special formatting after I put it into the macbook so that I can put the operating system on it?
    2.  Is a "normal" platter hard drive more reliable than a hybrid solid state drive?
    3.  Is there any additional driver or special software that I have to install for a hybrid solid state drive?
    4.  Currently there is no personal data stored on the computer.  Can I just put the new hard drive in, and then insert the snow leopard install cd?
    5.  If I install snow leopard, can I just go to the App store and get the free upgrade to Mavericks?
    6.  If I want to do the "Data Doubler" option in the future and add a normal Solid State drive into my computer, will it have trouble interacting with the 1 tb hybrid solid state drive?
    I would love to get some recommendations about the smartest option to upgrade my hard drive with something that will be fast (I edit lots of photos) and large (1 tb) that isn't going to cost too much.  I don't know much about the different brands or options (and there are so many listed in tons of online reviews), that I got really overwhelmed and confused by the info out there.
    I would really appreciate any help and advice.  I've never switched out a hard drive before.
    PLEASE HELP !!!  Thanks!
    Here is the "About this Mac" Info:
    Macbook Pro 15-in Mid 2012
    Model Identifier: MacBookPro9,1
    Processor: 2.3 GHz Intel Core i7
    Memory: 4 GB 1600 MHz DDR3
    Software: OS x 10.8.5
    Storage (Hard drive): APPLE HDD ST500LM012 Media, Rotational, SATA, GPT (GUID Partition Table)

    1.  Is a hybrid solid state drive going to need some kind of special formatting after I put it into the macbook so that I can put the operating system on it?
    The boot drive, regardless of what it is, needs to be formatted as Mac OS Extended (Journaled).  This is standard with OS X.
    2.  Is a "normal" platter hard drive more reliable than a hybrid solid state drive?
    There are arguments pro and con.  Bottom line, SSD's and hybrid drives are still quite expensive per GB than standard hard drives.  If you have the bucks and are a speed demon, go ahead.   I have better use for my money.   Standard hard drives are mechanical and may wear out over time.  But even though SSDs are not mechancial, they can still go bad and ultimately they even have a limit to their write capacity.  The jury is still out on this debate.
    3.  Is there any additional driver or special software that I have to install for a hybrid solid state drive?
    No
    4.  Currently there is no personal data stored on the computer.  Can I just put the new hard drive in, and then insert the snow leopard install cd?
    You can physically put the hard drive in but probably not install Snow Leopard on this MBP.
    The mid-2012 MacBookPro9,1 models came with Lion 10.7.3 (11D2097) preinstalled.   It is very unlikely you would be able to install Snow Leopard on it.  Historically you cannot install a version of OS X that is earlier than the version that came with your Mac (even if you replace the hard drive).
    5.  If I install snow leopard, can I just go to the App store and get the free upgrade to Mavericks?
    Not via Snow Leopard on this MBP.  See my response to #4.
    6.  If I want to do the "Data Doubler" option in the future and add a normal Solid State drive into my computer, will it have trouble interacting with the 1 tb hybrid solid state drive?
    No.  They are completely independent of each other; they are just independent storage units (drives) and their RAM does not interact.

  • Does using Group Policy Preferences to deploy printers require the print driver to be pre-installed?

    I'm trying to prepare our school system for Windows 7 (we currently use XP).  I would like to use the new Group Policy Preferences method of deploying printers.  I pushed out the XP client side extensions through WSUS.  In my test environment, I added the shared printer in group policy preferences.  My XP machine had the printers show up automatically, but my Windows 7 machine did not.  I realized that I had previously connected a printer of the same type to my XP machine before and the drivers were already installed.  To test this theory, I manually connected the shared printers to the Windows 7 machine, deleted them, then logged off and back on.  Now the printers are showing up from group policy.  My question is does using group policy preferences to deploy printers require the print driver to be pre-installed?  If not, then what am I doing wrong?  If so, is there a way to work around this?  Thanks for your help.
    EDIT:  To clarify, I am using the share method in GPP.  This is the error message I get in the event log:
    The user 'PRINTERNAME' preference item in the 'win7 printer test {946461A1-27F8-406F-A0B3-0A1A05AF34F6}' Group Policy object did not apply because it failed with error code '0x80070bcb The specified printer driver was not found on the system and needs to be downloaded.' This error was suppressed.

    This link have a description of resolution:
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc725938.aspx
    Open the GPMC.
    Open the GPO where the printer connections are deployed, and navigate to Computer Configuration, Policies, Administrative Templates, Control
    Panel, and thenPrinters.
    Note
    The Point and Print Restrictions setting can also be found under User Configuration\Policies\Administrative Templates\Control Panel\Printers.
    This policy is ignored by Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2, but is enforced by earlier editions of Windows including Windows XP with SP1, Windows Server 2003 with SP1, and Windows Server 2008. We recommend that you change
    this policy setting in both locations so that all down-level clients have a consistent experience.
    Right-click Point and Print Restrictions, and then click Properties.
    Click Enabled.
    Clear the following check boxes:
    Users can only point and print to these servers 
    Users can only point and print to machines in their forest 
    In the When installing drivers for a new connection box, select Do not show warning or elevation prompt.
    Scroll down, and in the When updating drivers for an existing connection box, select Show warning only.
    Click OK.

  • Can I add a 3rd party SSD to a dv7 that has the 750GB Hybrid drive?

    I have been given contradictory answers from 2 different HP sales reps.
    I am looking to purchase a dv7 with a single storage drive, and will at some later time like to add a second storage drive to the empty bay. One rep told me that both the dv6 and dv7 have 2 empty bays, and I am nearly certain this is incorrect as I've read that people were removing the optical drives of their dv6 in order to add a second disk storage drive. I was also told that if I purchase the laptop with the hybrid drive, I would NOT be able to add a SSD later on down the road because of incompatibility. Another rep told me that if I started with the hybrid drive, I COULD add a second storage drive, in the form of either a SSD or HDD.
    I realize that when trying to customize the laptop, it won't allow me to choose both the 750GB hybrid AND the 32GB SSD together, as it forces me to choose either the hybrid alone, or the regular HDD and the 32GB SSD...so perhaps there is some truth to a hybrid and SSD not being able to function together properly???
    So my question remains, if I customize a dv7 with only the 750GB Hybrid drive, could I later add a 3rd party SSD without issues?

    The hybrid drive is physically just a 2.5 inch laptop hard drive and will leave a bay open. The 32 gig ssd is an mSATA module and is located far away from the hard drives so even if one is present it should not block use of a second hard drive. Here is the most recent dv7 manual. Look at pages 47 and 70.
    Manual
    I believe as long as you have only one 2.5 inch standard SATA drive the second hard drive bay is available for an additional drive. You may need a caddy and cable, however. 
    What exact model of the dv7 are you looking to purchase? This would help answer more definitely I think. The dv6 definitely does not have 2 hard drive bays, just the dv7. 

  • Can I go to SCCM 2007 after deploying SCCM 2012?

    About a month ago I deployed SCCM 2012 in my Lab environment. 
    The testing I conduct supports a Security Engineering team.
    I’m running 100 servers, 2003 & 2008 R2, and 40 XP and Win7 Clients (most Win7). 
    After a month of troubleshooting it still will not function correctly. 
    30% of the clients show failed Client Health status, I can’t get the system to auto install via GPO, and of the simple MS updates I’ve pushed, only about 20% clients work.
    I’ve had a ticket with MS open for over a month now on the Client install piece but they have largely ignored me. 
    It’s been two weeks since I spoke with a MS tech, and that was after requesting the case be elevated. 
    After bouncing a few emails back and forth the Tier II Tech has never called me during my work Hrs. 
    8-5 EST.
    Is it possible to install SCCM 2007 once you have expanded the Schema to install SCCM 2012? 
    Absent that I’ll be forced to scrap SCCM and go with WSUS for updates for the short run.
    This issue is starting to really impact production issues and has to get either solved or bypassed.
    Regards,
    Bryan
    Arlington VA

    I'd recommend that you run the Schema Expansion tool that comes with Configuration Manager 2007.
    The reason being is that 2012 has done away with the SLP, meaning that this may or may not be included in it's version of the schema extensions. However, Configuration Manager 2012 does not have anything 'new' in its schema expansion, so you can safely 'downgrade'
    to 2007, but as I said, run the 2007 schema extension tool just in case the SLP attributes are not included in the 2012 schema expansion.
    I am more curious as to the problems you're experiencing with 2012 though, if your having problems with 2012 I don't see how reverting to 2007 will resolve the problems?
    Kriss Milne | MCSE
    *Please click 'Vote As Helpful' or 'Mark as Answer' if a post has helped you or answered your question*

  • Deploying SCCM Client through Group Policy

    Hi
     I want to deploy SCCM Clients to PCs using Group policy - I know that i  need the
    MSI file which is  included in the SCCM setup DVD but i dont have a fast internet to download the whole package as i just need  (CCMSETUP AND ADM Template) 
    Could someone please share a link where i can download these files? 
    Thanks Guys,...

    Just to help you, you can use this link to install or deploy configuration manager 2012 R2 clients to systems via group policy
    http://prajwaldesai.com/deploying-configuration-manager-2012-r2-clients-using-group-policy/
    Prajwal Desai, http://prajwaldesai.com

  • U510 really using Hybrid Drive?

    Hi there,
    Still haven't seen my post hit about why the U510 uses the SATA disk for booting and OS files.  I've dug into the Hybrid+SSD on the U510 but it doesn't appear to be a true hybrid drive that migrates higher value data to the SSD from the slower SATA disk over tim.  The reason for thinking this is Windows 8 sees two discrete drives while true hybrids are supposed to appear as one drive.  Anyway, I'm looking for a reason to not redo my U510 or return it for the G780 that has a larger screen and much faster processor.
    Thanks,
    -chris

    Hi mate
    Welcome to the forums
    Before proceeding further, could you please post a snip of your disk management?
    By the way, u510 is an ultrabook. The sole purpose of msata in an ultrabook is caching(Intel rapid start and smart response technology) and that is set up in everyy ultrabook.
    Regards
    Ishaan Ideapad Y560(i3 330m), Hp Elitebook 8460p!(i5-2520M) Hp Pavilion n208tx(i5-4200u)
    If you think a post helped you, then you can give Kudos to the post by pressing the Star on the left of the post. If you think a post solved your problem, then mark it as a solution so that others having the same problem can refer to it.

  • MSSD Hard Drive Acceleration Cache vs hybrid drive

    I'm thinking of buying an ENVY laptop and noticed there are 2 separate options for SSD.  One is an hybrid hard drive and the other is mSSD Hard Drive Acceleration Cache.  What is the difference and what are the benefits of each.  Also...
    thanks

    When requesting assistance, please provide the complete model name and product number (pn) of the HP computer in question. HP/Compaq makes thousands of models of computers. Without this information it may be difficult or impossible to assist you in resolving your issue.
    Please enter the model/product information into HP's Online Consumer Support page and post it here for our review.
    Please see Wikipedia - Hybrid drive for information on both hybrid / caching styles. The mSSD / HDD style is typically based on two seperate drives and Intel Smart Response Technology (which is implemented through a combination of certain Intel chipsets and Intel storage drivers). The hybrid HDD style is typically based a traditional hard drive and NAND flash memory on one chassis and is fully impemented on the drive.
    If you have any further questions, please don't hesitate to ask.
    Please click the White KUDOS "Thumbs Up" to show your appreciation
    Frank
    {------------ Please click the "White Kudos" Thumbs Up to say THANKS for helping.
    Please click the "Accept As Solution" on my post, if my assistance has solved your issue. ------------V
    This is a user supported forum. I am a volunteer and I don't work for HP.
    HP 15t-j100 (on loan from HP)
    HP 13 Split x2 (on loan from HP)
    HP Slate8 Pro (on loan from HP)
    HP a1632x - Windows 7, 4GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6130y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6320y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240
    HP p7-1026 - Windows 7, 6GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6787c - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240

  • Solid State Drive or Solid State Hybrid Drive?

    I have a Mac Mini late 2012, with 1TB running Yosemite and 16GB of ram and I'm thinking of getting either a SSD or SSHD.  Looking for some opinions about either one.  The research I've done so far doesn't seem to find much of a difference in terms of speed between the two.  Of course the price is a big factor and I also write and record a lot of music so that would be a factor too.
    Any help is appreciated.
    Thanks.

    Lanny wrote:version.
    The Hybrid drive is much faster than a standard hard rive
    That will depend on the definiton of "standard." If standard is the typical 5400 rpm drive that ships with a MacMini, Yes. If it's a 5400 rpm Fusion drive setup, then, No.
    I replaced a 7200RPM Seagate Momentus (7200.4 version) drive with a 7200RPM Seagate Momentus XT Hybrid, the drives are mechanically identical other than the 8GB of SSD fitted to the XT. and it is a lot faster than the non hybrid version. I have not had the time to test against a fusion drive but would expect that with 128GB of SSD rather than 8GB the fusion drive would be faster.

  • HP Split x2 hybrid drive change AHCI to ATA

    I have an HP Split x2 hybrid drive tablet/notebook.  I am trying to change the SATA mode from AHCI to ATA temporarily.  I am trying to hack a notebook hard drive from my grandson's old HP notebook so he can use it in his XBox 360 slim.  I have done the thumb drive portion, but now I have to change the AHCI to ATA.  I found the controllers, but there is no way to change the settings.  Please help!!

    Magsnak wrote:
    I have an HP Split x2 hybrid drive tablet/notebook.  I am trying to change the SATA mode from AHCI to ATA temporarily.  I am trying to hack a notebook hard drive from my grandson's old HP notebook so he can use it in his XBox 360 slim.  I have done the thumb drive portion, but now I have to change the AHCI to ATA.  I found the controllers, but there is no way to change the settings.  Please help!!
    Most likely your system is hardware locked and you will not be able to mess with those UEFI/Bios options and again we aren't here to help someone Hack HP or any other systems hardware BIOS. This is a DIY project you will attempt yourself.
    I am a Volunteer to help others on here-not a HP employee.
    Replies aren't online 24/7 because of Time Zone differences.
    Remember in this Day and Age of Computing the Internet is Knowledge at your fingertips if you choose understand it. -2015-

  • Partition design for hybrid drive

    Hi everybody.
    I have a laptop with a seagate hybrid drive.
    Win 8.1 is preinstalled and will find itself later in a kvm vm.
    gdisk (with live cd boot) shows one partition at the very end, spread over 8gb, code 8400, description intel rapid start.
    I read the ssd will decide by itself (hardware logic) which data will make it there or not. Did I get this right and isn't linux involved in any way? I am afraid I missed something and have to use those 8gb for the root file system and make the other hd-space available by mounting to other mount points?
    My guess is to keep the ssd-partition untouched, delete all the others and create one big partition for use with arch. I would like to encrypt it using luks and have lvm on top of it.
    Is that the way to go, using 2 partitions in the end (1 ssd, 1 for the rest)? Or do you recommend another way?
    Thanks for your help.
    fuz

    arch_fuz wrote:I read the ssd will decide by itself (hardware logic) which data will make it there or not. Did I get this right and isn't linux involved in any way?
    I think this is correct, at least that't what implied here.

  • Need help in installing a SATA hard drive with 865pe NEO2

    Hello there
    I need a help in installing a Sata hard drive ,it is WD 250 GB , my motherboard is 865PE Noe2 , the bios is the latest one
    already I got another old hard drive ,not a Sata ,a regular IDE one installed as a master hard drive
    I want to install the sata hd as a slave for the IDE hd for now to transfer the files and documents
    I already physically installed the Sata hard drive yet the problem is that it was listed in the bios , I followed some of the steps here in the forum mentioned but all what I got is I found it listed as the fourth IDE master , not as the primary IDE slave
    in Windows Xp Sp2 it is not listed of course in the windows explorer , but it is there in the device manager
    look I am very confused and I tried most of the combinations in the ide configuration in BIOS 
    what should I do coz I am feeling so bad and stupid  ,you can consider me a n00b in this hard drive thing

    1st the sata drive cannot be listed as a slave drive to the ide master [key word=ide-can be configured as master OR slave, master IF only 1 hd, master and slave IF 2 hds], on the sata controler you can have master and slave, the ide cable has two connectors for the hds, sata has only 1 hd connector.
    are you wanting to install the sata as primary master and move the operating sys to that drive, if so you will need an IMAGING software to move an operating system OR you could do a fresh operating system install to the sata drive then install your programs.

  • I want to install hybrid drive in Macbook pro. I bought my Mac book with lion and am now running mountain lion. I was told I needed install disk to set up new drive before restoring from my time capsule.Is this correct and if so how do I get disk osx10?

    I purchased a Mac book Pro in Aug 2012 with lion and have upgraded to mountain lion. I currently am looking to install the segate 750 gig hybrid drive. I watching video I shows me needing a OSX 10 disk to boot off of when the new disk is in and the use time capsule to restore system from back up drive to new hybrid. Hope I got this correct so far. that being said my Mac Book did not come with a disk therefore is one available, when I get to point of restoring from back up with it be the same mountain lion system I had. Sorr if this sounds redudant.. Thank you in advance

    Connect the new hybrid drive to your MBP.  Start up your MBP holding the OPTION key, the two HDD icons will appear.  Select the 'restore' icon on the right.  When you get to the menu where you have 4 options, select Disk Utility.  Format the drive and then you can use the option of restoring it from Time Machine.
    Ciao.

  • Ssd cache and hybrid drive

    I am looking to order the HP 17t-j000 with 8GB of memory.  It offers both SSD cache and a Hybrid drive as options, and you can choose both.    Does it make sense to get both, or is this just redundant?   I

    No the SSD cache drive with hybrid drive will outperform just the hybrid drive by quite a bit. You will get boot time performance close to a main SSD drive, but a main SSD drive would be even faster, particularly on data transfer.

  • Can I use SCCM 2007 to deploy SCCM 2012 Agent

    I was reading the scenarios for deploying the SCCM 2012 agent here
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/gg682132.aspx
    I have been planning to deploy the 2012 agent using an SCCM 2007 deployment package. I am not migrating any data/packages/collections/anything from SCCM 2007. 
    I am looking for a sane way to deploy 2000ish clients a day for 2 weeks and be done. 
    I figure they are all SCCM 2007 clients so lets deploy 2012 agent using SCCM 2007.
    I read the following in the link above and it sounds like the way I want to go – use SCCM 2007 software distribution…
    Upgrade installation by using application management
    Upgrades clients to a newer version by using Configuration   Manager application management. You can also use Configuration Manager 2007 software  
    distribution to upgrade clients to System Center 2012 Configuration Manager.
    Then later in the same document there is this…
    How to Upgrade Configuration Manager Clients by Using a Package and Program
    You can use Configuration Manager to create and deploy a package and program that upgrades the client software for selected computers in your hierarchy. A package definition file
    is supplied with Configuration Manager that populates the package properties with typically used values. You can customize the behavior of the client installation by specifying additional command line properties.
    You cannot upgrade Configuration Manager 2007 clients to System Center 2012 Configuration Manager by using this method.
    In this scenario, use automatic client upgrade, which automatically creates and deploys a package that contains the latest version of the client.
    What???!??  There is no Automatic client upgrade feature in 2007 – so how does that even make sense?  In one section, it says I can deploy the 2012 Agent using SCCM 2007 software distribution, and then later in the same document, it
    says I can't.  I am probably misunderstanding somthing.
    Is it possible to make a package/program in SCCM 2007 that will make targeted clients upgrade to Agent 2012 and join the new SCCM 2012 Site?

    I tested this (deploying 2012 agent using existing 2007 SCCM infrastructure) with a few test systems at my desk and it seems to work pretty smoothly.  I made a package to deploy SCCM 2012 SP1 and added it to my SCCM 2007 Site.  Then I deployed
    the 2012 agent from 2007 and it worked great.  If it works this well in production, I will be able to migrate all of my clients in less than a weeks time. 
    I have not published the 2012 site information in AD - and I don't plan to.  We would have some overlapping site boundaries - and in 2012 it seems its unnecessary in a single site hierarchy.  I AM planning to use boundaries to assign
    DPs, but thankfully site and DP boundaries have been separated.  It works great to just specify the site in everything and not worry about auto discovery.  My clients don't move among sites since I only have one large site.
    Sorry that I somehow posted this same question twice, and thanks for cleaning that up.
     In my installation, I just called ccmsetup.exe with the following command line...
     /mp:myMP.mydomain.com CCMLOGMAXHISTORY=5 CCMLOGMAXSIZE=1000000 SMSCACHEFLAGS=PERCENTDISKSPACE;NTFSONLY SMSCACHESIZE=10 SMSMP=myMP.mydomain.com SMSSITECODE=CCM
    I am not sure that I need to specify the MP twice, but it is working to do so.  I'm also not sure whether the log and cache flags will be honored since there are existing settings from SCCM2007 agent.  I think that the 2012 install will not change
    these settings upon installation, but it does not appear to hurt the process to include them just in case it does work.

Maybe you are looking for