Limits to recognized size of 2nd hard disk
I just installed a Seagate 250 gb ST3250823A internal hard disk that is only recognized as a 128 gb disk. Is this a system limitation, and if so is there a fix to access the remaining available capacity? I have a 200gb firewire disk that is fully recognized.
OWC sells Intech HD Speedtools a software app that removes the 128GB Hd limitation for any G4 Mac.
I think its $15 OEM software. with pruchase of any new HD from OWC.
Otherwise you could buy it from Intech.
or get an ATA133 PCI card and install it in your PCI slot and run the HD from it.
Similar Messages
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How to get the size of a hard disk?
Hi,
As above, how to get the size of a hard disk by using Java.
Thanks you!
AlexI would be interested in the answer of this question, too.
In core Java there is no way to find it out in a platform independent manner because of the hardware abstraction of the VM. So my only idea is to write a native library for doing this and colling it via JNI -
2nd HARD DISK DISSAPPEARED..HELP!!!!!
someone PLEASE help me...i have 2 years of data on this disk.
My 2nd hard disk disappeared from my desktop and Finder. I see it in Disk Utility, nad verified it and says everything is ok. This all happenned when i creatd a user account under my admin, and i changed the "ownership nad permissions" on that 2nd user to NO ACCESS. I guess something messed up. After i selected NO ACCESS on that 2nd user, i went back to my admin account, nad i couldn't access the disk there. i tried cahnging the disk to READ WRITE in my admin, but it wouldn't change, kept being no access. 20 minutes later after messing around, the disk is GONE from desktop and Finder....HOW DO I GET IT BACK?
thanks in advance to anyone who can help.SO, i did this and it worked
Choose Go to Folder from the Finder's Go menu and enter /Volumes/ as the folder's location. Next, open the Terminal in the /Applications/Utilities/ folder while keeping the Volumes folder open. Type the following into the window:
chmod 755
followed by a space. Drag the volume in question into the Terminal window and press Enter. Log out and back in, and see if the drive reappears on your desktop
Now, my question is....how do i do what i want to do? How do i get my second user (standard) to not see or simply not be able to use the 2nd hard disk, while me, admin, of course can see the 2nd hard drive. -
Hi,
which hard disk adapter I need to use to put a 2nd hard disk to my new E540 (replace DVD drive)?
I found these:
http://shop.lenovo.com/SEUILibrary/controller/e/gbweb/LenovoPortal/en_GB/catalog.workflow:item.detai... (ThinkPad Serial ATA Hard Drive Bay Adapter III)
http://shop.lenovo.com/SEUILibrary/controller/e/gbweb/LenovoPortal/en_GB/catalog.workflow:item.detai... (ThinkPad 12.7mm Serial ATA Hard Drive Bay Adapter III)
Neither one lists compatibility with E540.
So which hard drive adapter I need to use, and where can I get that (preferably in Finland/Europe)?
I have the OneLink dock, so I could use external hard drives, but I need to have also the 2nd internal HD.
-Paavo
Solved!
Go to Solution.Thanks a lot of your support and attitude, ejebinger (Fanfold Paper).
Now, can somebody else point me to Lenovo information that confirms the right hard disk adapter model for E540?
I have searched the web and especially Lenovo pages, and tried calling local Lenovo and dealers but they cannot answer this question.
I never thought bying accessories for Lenovo laptops could be this difficult.
-Paavo -
2nd Hard Disk on Qosmio X770-103
it's possible to add a 2nd hard disk on Qosmio x770-103?
Recommend checking this Toshiba step by step instructions:
[Qosmio X770 First (Primary) HDD Replacement|http://aps2.toshiba-tro.de/kb0/CRU22039L0000R01.htm]
[Qosmio X770 - Secondary Hard Disc Drive Replacement Procedure|http://aps2.toshiba-tro.de/kb0/CRU22039M0000R01.htm] -
Maximum size possible of hard disk in my IMAC G5 20 inch?
I am using an IMAC G5, 2GHz with a 400 Gb hard disk.
I would like to buy a larger disk, 500 Gb minimum or even 750 Gb.
- What is the maximum size the IMAC can handle?
- Where would I find a document on apple.com to provide further details on the hard disk specifications?
- what is the interface in use for the disk?
thanks in advance for your help.
PatrickBonjour,
The iMac G5 uses the Serial ATA (SATA) interface in the standard desktop 3.5" size.
You can install any capacity of drive you can buy on the market today.
Installation Instructions (4.5Mo).
mrtotes -
NW8000 NC8000 2nd hard disk caddy (multibay)
Hi, I'm unable to run the 2nd hard drive to Ultra DMA5 (like the main unit) The disk is UDMA5 capable but the interface work only au UDMA2. Any idea?
Thank,
MatteoHi
If you have a connector in second HDD bay you can add a second HDD. But you will need such a metal caddy as on the first HDD. Therefore you can contact an authorized service provider because you can get all spare parts from them.
On the Toshiba website is a list of all ASPs, check this!!! -
Can't enter windows 7 after I added 2nd hard disk
Bought a Thinkpad Serial ATA Hard Drive Bay Adapter (Lenovo 40Y8725) and a Hitachi 500G hard drive for my T61, the capacity now is increased to 820G.
But the problem is I can't boot my laptop!! Every time I restart my laptop, before I can enter the system(window 7), it shows a blue screen with an error code: "IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL".
Several things I tried:
1, If I take off the bay adapter, everything becomes fine. And after I enter the system, insert the bay adapter, the new 500G hard disk can be recognized normally. (actually, this is what I have to do now if I want to reboot...)
2, Put the original 320G hard disk to the bay adapter and leave its original position (internal bay) empty, everything is fine
3, If now put 500G hard disk to the empty position (320G is still in bay adapter), problem again
So, it seems the adapter bay and both two hard disks should be ok by themselves, and the problem only appears when I plug them together to my laptop. My roommate also bought a bay adapter, and it works totally well on his T400 and windows 7...
Thanks a lot in advance!Well, you should never trust a solution from someone who writes Speed Spectrum Clocking when in fact it is Spread Spectrum Clocking. However, the only reason I mentioned it at all is that you have to choose a setting in order to save the Max Transfer Speed setting.
They're both Hitachi drives? (It would seem so if you were able to use the tool on both drives.)
If you're not using a hard drive caddy on the drive in the Ultrabay, I would place a piece of insulation between the bare drive and the hard drive adapter. Some people use a sheet of plastic. I prefer a note card as it provides a cool visual indicator should the drive reach a temperature of 451 F.
I might have to retire this solution if it doesn't start to produce better results.
It the insulation suggestion doesn't help, I would post back with the product number of your T61 and any upgrades you have made. -
G5 Dual 2.3 GHz Not Recognizing all of 2nd hard drive space
I just installed a 2nd Western Digital SATA II 500gb internal hard drive. It is only recognizing 465gb. I formatted the drive after installing. Just wondering if any one else has seen this issue before.
Sounds like you are counting to 1000 by stopping at 1000 instead of stopping at 1024 like you should.
Short answer is that one way of counting is used by the marketing division (and for printing the box) and the other is used by your computer. So nothing is wrong.
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gigabyte under "Consumer confusion" for a more in depth explanation of GB vs GiB. -
Satellite P200-1EE Can I install a 2nd hard disk in the spare bay?
First of all, hi everyone!
I have the above model laptop, and it has a spare disk bay. There are pin connectors at one end, but it does not seem like the drive will fit. It's like there is a component missing - like the connector slot housing for the 1st drive. I have bought a 500GB drive, and have tried seeing whether it would fit. The 1st drive has a metal caddy attached, and that did not work either.
Is it possible to fit a 2nd drive to this model? If so, what would I need to do it?
Thanks!
AndyHi
If you have a connector in second HDD bay you can add a second HDD. But you will need such a metal caddy as on the first HDD. Therefore you can contact an authorized service provider because you can get all spare parts from them.
On the Toshiba website is a list of all ASPs, check this!!! -
Rescue and Recovery 4.31 - How to make backup for 2nd hard disk drive?
What should I do that R & R version 4.31 (Windows 7, 64 bit) make backup for second hard drive?
On the screen "Set Schedule and Preferences' in the options "Include partition" I don't have partition D: on my notebook and , of course, it can't be selected.
ThinkPad W701ds, with two built-in disk drive (C: and D, backup is performed on the "USB External Storage Device '.
Solved!
Go to Solution.see this post http://forums.lenovo.com/t5/General-Discussion/Back-up-to-external-HD-7/m-p/322465#M9269
Thinkpad R61 7733-1GU
Thinkpad X61T 7762-54U
Thinkpad X60T 6363-4GU
Did a member help you today? Thank them with a Kudo!
If a post answers your question, please mark it as an "Accepted Solution"!
Regards,
GMAC -
Is there a maximum size (on 2TB hard disk) for iTunes folder?
I have a large music collection which I am converting and storing on my hard drive in iTunes. Is there a limit to how much music I can store without iTunes becoming buggy? I already have 1TB stored and will probably finish at around 1.5TB. Does anyone know of any problems with storing this much information (music files AIFF only) Thanks
My library just crossed 350K songs on ~3TB Firewire and no problems except as what whay Limnos mentioned with the speed issue. I recently upgraded my RAM to 8GB which helped with this.
FYI - There are a few of us with large libraies that have had a strange intermittent permission issue after upgrading to Lion. https://discussions.apple.com/message/17623936#17623936 . Solution is to dsiable local snapshots taken by Time Machine. All there in the thread in case you run into this, -
Is there a maximum size for an internal hard disk ?
I just bought an 2.5" 160 Gb HD to replace my internal 120 Gb. Presently I only tried to mount it as an external disk, but it is recognized as a 128 Gb disk, not a 160 Gb. As it is a pain to change the internal HD, I would like to be sure the disk will be recognized as a 160 Gb before. I called Apple hot line, but they have no information, for them the maximum capacity for a Powerbook G4 12" is 80 Gb as it was never offered a larger size, but already I have a 120 Gb that I mounted myself perfectly working.
Is there a software / firmware limitation of the addressable size of a hard disk on a PowerBook G4 12" ???I have called Apple several times, I have talked to the Apple Store in KC. Same answer...well it comes in 40-60-80 configs. Not a good answer.
The 12 inch powerbook G4 supports ATA-100 (100Mb/sec) interface. The specs on the Hitachi HD refer to ATA-6, which refers to the higher speed transfer rate of UDMA6.
As I understand the ATA (AT Attachment),PATA (Parrallel ATA), IDE (Integrated Drive Electronics) and UDMA (Ultra Direct Memory Access) are basically used interchangeably to describe the interface (see wikopedia for detail difference of implementation of specs).
Since the Mac OS supports terabystes of HD data, the OS is not a limitation. The limitation is in the motherboard interface and controller for ATA (ATA-100)
The ATA specification is 28-bit addressing with a maximum capacity to address of 137gb - 128gb formated. It is calculated as follows. A bit is either on or off meaning it is binary - or in mathmatical terms base of 2.
2 to the 28th power = 268,435,456 disk sectors to address.
Each sector has blocks of 512 bytes.
268,435,456 * 512 = 137,438,953,472 or 137GB
Once formated the drive capacity for data is 128GB.
This is the same issue as the W98 PCs. An indication Apple is way behind in technology for HD interface and controllers. Very sad!
Now the part I do not understand ATA-6 introduced 48 bit addressing, increasing the limit to 128 PiB (or 144 petabytes). This is much larger than 128GB standard ATA. My assumption here is the Hitachi HD supports ATA-6 however Apple does not support more than standard ATA on the motherboard HD interface and controller. The G4 HD controller I assume does not support Ultra DMA mode 5 compliant (UDMA5). This would mean it does not support the 80-connector cables, only the older 40-connector cables.
Does anyone know if this powerbook supports ATA-100,UDMA5, 80-connector cables? -
Problem with USB External Hard Disk Drive
I have similar problem with hard disk MK6025GAS in Sweex casing connected via USB as Raistlfiren in this post but I am not sure if it has something to do with kernel. The problem is that when I plug the hard disk via USB it is not even shown with in /dev/ or by fdisk -l. I had similar problems with the drive before but it was always shown in /dev.
I got same output from dmesg as Raistlfiren in the post before
# dmesg | tail
sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] ASC=0x0 ASCQ=0x0
sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] Sense Key : 0x0 [current]
Info fld=0x0
I was browsing net for a lot of time to find a solution but nothing helped a lot. The problem is closes to the one described on Gentoo Forum
I can see that it is recognized by computer since it is shown with lsusb
# lsusb
Bus 001 Device 005: ID 13fd:0540 Initio Corporation
# lsusb -d 13fd:0540 -v
Bus 001 Device 005: ID 13fd:0540 Initio Corporation
Device Descriptor:
bLength 18
bDescriptorType 1
bcdUSB 2.00
bDeviceClass 0 (Defined at Interface level)
bDeviceSubClass 0
bDeviceProtocol 0
bMaxPacketSize0 64
idVendor 0x13fd Initio Corporation
idProduct 0x0540
bcdDevice 0.00
iManufacturer 1 Initio
iProduct 2 MK6025GAS
iSerial 3 0010100500000000
bNumConfigurations 1
Configuration Descriptor:
bLength 9
bDescriptorType 2
wTotalLength 32
bNumInterfaces 1
bConfigurationValue 1
iConfiguration 0
bmAttributes 0xc0
Self Powered
MaxPower 2mA
Interface Descriptor:
bLength 9
bDescriptorType 4
bInterfaceNumber 0
bAlternateSetting 0
bNumEndpoints 2
bInterfaceClass 8 Mass Storage
bInterfaceSubClass 6 SCSI
bInterfaceProtocol 80 Bulk (Zip)
iInterface 0
Endpoint Descriptor:
bLength 7
bDescriptorType 5
bEndpointAddress 0x81 EP 1 IN
bmAttributes 2
Transfer Type Bulk
Synch Type None
Usage Type Data
wMaxPacketSize 0x0200 1x 512 bytes
bInterval 0
Endpoint Descriptor:
bLength 7
bDescriptorType 5
bEndpointAddress 0x02 EP 2 OUT
bmAttributes 2
Transfer Type Bulk
Synch Type None
Usage Type Data
wMaxPacketSize 0x0200 1x 512 bytes
bInterval 1
Device Qualifier (for other device speed):
bLength 10
bDescriptorType 6
bcdUSB 2.00
bDeviceClass 0 (Defined at Interface level)
bDeviceSubClass 0
bDeviceProtocol 0
bMaxPacketSize0 64
bNumConfigurations 1
Device Status: 0x0001
Self Powered
From the beginning I though and I still think that the partition table is screwed up but the programs like TestDisk and fixdisktable work only with disks shown in /dev/
Additionally, I have checked the content of /var/log/kernel.log
Sep 16 22:03:58 hramat kernel: usb 1-2: new high speed USB device using ehci_hcd and address 5
Sep 16 22:03:58 hramat kernel: usb 1-2: configuration #1 chosen from 1 choice
Sep 16 22:03:58 hramat kernel: scsi4 : SCSI emulation for USB Mass Storage devices
Sep 16 22:03:58 hramat kernel: usb-storage: device found at 5
Sep 16 22:03:58 hramat kernel: usb-storage: waiting for device to settle before scanning
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: scsi 4:0:0:0: Direct-Access Initio MK6025GAS 2.23 PQ: 0 ANSI: 0
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sd 4:0:0:0: Attached scsi generic sg4 type 0
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: usb-storage: device scan complete
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] 117210240 512-byte hardware sectors: (60.0 GB/55.8 GiB)
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] Write Protect is off
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] Mode Sense: 86 0b 00 02
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] Assuming drive cache: write through
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] Assuming drive cache: write through
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sdd:<6>sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] Sense Key : 0x0 [current]
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: Info fld=0x0
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] ASC=0x0 ASCQ=0x0
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] Sense Key : 0x0 [current]
and /var/log/errors.log
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] Assuming drive cache: write through
Sep 16 22:04:03 hramat kernel: sd 4:0:0:0: [sdd] Assuming drive cache: write through
Sep 16 22:07:35 hramat kernel: INFO: task async/0:3957 blocked for more than 120 seconds.
Sep 16 22:07:35 hramat kernel: "echo 0 > /proc/sys/kernel/hung_task_timeout_secs" disables this message.
The only thing I understand from these logs is that the disk is blocked, therefore not listed in /dev.
Assuming the newer kernel problems I could try to use some older live linux CD to see if that would work. I am also thinking of connecting this hard drive directly to my laptop, using live linux CD and maybe check the output of hdparm. Is there anything else I could check or try?
Thank you for any help or suggestions
MatejThank you nTia89 for response. Sorry for not providing enough information.
I believe the problem is not system dependent. I have dual boot with windows and there the disk has also problems. However, I do have Arch32 with Kernel 2.6.30, using Gnome. hal and dbus are also running.
I did not tried to connect the disk to the computer directly, I will try it today.
Yesterday I have used SystemRescueCD 0.4.1 with Kernel 2.6.22. I wanted to see if it will be recognized by the system and placed in /dev/. Yes it was. This means that the problem highlighted in Gentoo forum can be true, but it doesn't solve my problem. I have tried to connect the drive several times to Arch and it was not shown in /dev/sd*, in SystemRescueCD it was placed as /dev/sdb. Now I am sure that the partition table is screwed up.
So I have started to play with the drive in SystemRescueCD with TestDisk and FixDiskTable but without success.
% fdisk -l
Disk /dev/sda: 100.0 GB, 100030242816 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 12161 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sda1 * 1 1530 12289693+ 7 HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sda2 1531 6672 41303115 7 HPFS/NTFS
/dev/sda3 6673 12161 44090392+ f W95 Ext'd (LBA)
/dev/sda5 * 6673 11908 42058138+ 83 Linux
/dev/sda6 11909 12161 2032191 82 Linux swap / Solaris
Disk /dev/sdb: 60.0 GB, 60011642880 bytes
64 heads, 32 sectors/track, 57231 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 2048 * 512 = 1048576 bytes
Disk /dev/sdb doesn't contain a valid partition table
Manufacturer disk geometry: Heads: 16; Cylinders: 16383; Sectors: 63; Logical Blocks (LBA): 117210240
TestDisk found only Linux partitions with 43Gb while disk had only one 60Gb partitioned with FAT32/NTFS.
Also recognized 64 heads, 57231 cylinders and 32 sectors (same as from fdisk -l), which obviously differs from manufacturer disk geometry.
testdisk.log:
Thu Sep 17 19:09:26 2009
Command line: TestDisk
TestDisk 6.8, Data Recovery Utility, August 2007
Christophe GRENIER
Linux version (ext2fs lib: 1.40.2, ntfs lib: 9:0:0, reiserfs lib: 0.3.1-rc8, ewf lib: none)
Using locale 'C'.
Hard disk list
Disk /dev/sda - 100 GB / 93 GiB - CHS 12161 255 63, sector size=512
Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57231 64 32, sector size=512
Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB
Partition table type: Intel
Interface Advanced
New options :
Dump : No
Cylinder boundary : Yes
Allow partial last cylinder : No
Expert mode : No
Analyse Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57231 64 32
Current partition structure:
Partition sector doesn't have the endmark 0xAA55
Ask the user for vista mode
Computes LBA from CHS for Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57232 64 32
Allow partial last cylinder : Yes
search_vista_part: 1
search_part()
Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57232 64 32
Search for partition aborted
Results
interface_write()
No partition found or selected for recovery
search_part()
Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57232 64 32
Search for partition aborted
Results
interface_write()
No partition found or selected for recovery
simulate write!
write_mbr_i386: starting...
Store new MBR code
write_all_log_i386: starting...
No extended partition
Analyse Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57232 64 32
Current partition structure:
Partition sector doesn't have the endmark 0xAA55
Ask the user for vista mode
Allow partial last cylinder : Yes
search_vista_part: 1
search_part()
Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57232 64 32
Results
interface_write()
No partition found or selected for recovery
search_part()
Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57232 64 32
NTFS at 8956/63/32
heads/cylinder 255 (NTFS) != 64 (HD)
sect/track 63 (NTFS) != 32 (HD)
filesystem size 24579387
sectors_per_cluster 8
mft_lcn 1024141
mftmirr_lcn 1650676
clusters_per_mft_record -10
clusters_per_index_record 1
NTFS part_offset=9392094720, part_size=12584646144, sector_size=512
NTFS partition cannot be added (part_offset<part_size).
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 34129 1 1 75201 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=69896224, size=84116272, end=154012495, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 34632 2 1 75704 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=70926400, size=84116272, end=155042671, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 34668 0 1 75740 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=71000064, size=84116272, end=155116335, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 34673 1 1 75745 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=71010336, size=84116272, end=155126607, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 34699 2 1 75771 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=71063616, size=84116272, end=155179887, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 34708 2 1 75780 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=71082048, size=84116272, end=155198319, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 36338 0 1 77410 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=74420224, size=84116272, end=158536495, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 36367 0 1 77439 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=74479616, size=84116272, end=158595887, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 36401 2 1 77473 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=74549312, size=84116272, end=158665583, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 36414 2 1 77486 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=74575936, size=84116272, end=158692207, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 37949 1 1 79021 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=77719584, size=84116272, end=161835855, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 37955 1 1 79027 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=77731872, size=84116272, end=161848143, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 37989 1 1 79061 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=77801504, size=84116272, end=161917775, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 38404 0 1 79476 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=78651392, size=84116272, end=162767663, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 39636 2 1 80708 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=81174592, size=84116272, end=165290863, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 41263 1 1 82335 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=84506656, size=84116272, end=168622927, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 41266 1 1 82338 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=84512800, size=84116272, end=168629071, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 41660 0 1 82732 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=85319680, size=84116272, end=169435951, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 42898 0 1 83970 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=87855104, size=84116272, end=171971375, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 43244 1 1 84316 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=88563744, size=84116272, end=172680015, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 44870 2 1 85942 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=91893824, size=84116272, end=176010095, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 44930 2 1 86002 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=92016704, size=84116272, end=176132975, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 46961 0 1 88033 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=96176128, size=84116272, end=180292399, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 47312 0 1 88384 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=96894976, size=84116272, end=181011247, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 48393 2 1 89465 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=99108928, size=84116272, end=183225199, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 49633 2 1 90705 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=101648448, size=84116272, end=185764719, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 50767 1 1 91839 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=103970848, size=84116272, end=188087119, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 51150 1 1 92222 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=104755232, size=84116272, end=188871503, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 51941 1 1 93013 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=106375200, size=84116272, end=190491471, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 52759 0 1 93831 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=108050432, size=84116272, end=192166703, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 53069 1 1 94141 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=108685344, size=84116272, end=192801615, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 53768 0 1 94840 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=110116864, size=84116272, end=194233135, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 54287 0 1 95359 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=111179776, size=84116272, end=195296047, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 54493 2 1 95565 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=111601728, size=84116272, end=195717999, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 54861 1 1 95933 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=112355360, size=84116272, end=196471631, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 54890 2 1 95962 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=112414784, size=84116272, end=196531055, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 54953 2 1 96025 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=112543808, size=84116272, end=196660079, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 56330 1 1 97402 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=115363872, size=84116272, end=199480143, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 56334 0 1 97406 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=115372032, size=84116272, end=199488303, disk end=117211136)
recover_EXT2: s_block_group_nr=0/320, s_mnt_count=31/34, s_blocks_per_group=32768
recover_EXT2: boot_sector=0, s_blocksize=4096
recover_EXT2: s_blocks_count 10514534
recover_EXT2: part_size 84116272
D Linux 57203 0 1 98275 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
This partition ends after the disk limits. (start=117151744, size=84116272, end=201268015, disk end=117211136)
Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57232 64 32
Check the harddisk size: HD jumpers settings, BIOS detection...
The harddisk (60 GB / 55 GiB) seems too small! (< 103 GB / 95 GiB)
The following partitions can't be recovered:
D Linux 34129 1 1 75201 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 34632 2 1 75704 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 34668 0 1 75740 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 34673 1 1 75745 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 34699 2 1 75771 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 34708 2 1 75780 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 36338 0 1 77410 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 36367 0 1 77439 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 36401 2 1 77473 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 36414 2 1 77486 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 37949 1 1 79021 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 37955 1 1 79027 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 37989 1 1 79061 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 38404 0 1 79476 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 39636 2 1 80708 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 41263 1 1 82335 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 41266 1 1 82338 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 41660 0 1 82732 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 42898 0 1 83970 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 43244 1 1 84316 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 44870 2 1 85942 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 44930 2 1 86002 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 46961 0 1 88033 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 47312 0 1 88384 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 48393 2 1 89465 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 49633 2 1 90705 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 50767 1 1 91839 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 51150 1 1 92222 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 51941 1 1 93013 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 52759 0 1 93831 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 53069 1 1 94141 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 53768 0 1 94840 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 54287 0 1 95359 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 54493 2 1 95565 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 54861 1 1 95933 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 54890 2 1 95962 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 54953 2 1 96025 27 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 56330 1 1 97402 26 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 56334 0 1 97406 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
D Linux 57203 0 1 98275 25 16 84116272
EXT3 Large file Sparse superblock Recover, 43 GB / 40 GiB
Results
interface_write()
No partition found or selected for recovery
simulate write!
write_mbr_i386: starting...
Store new MBR code
write_all_log_i386: starting...
No extended partition
Interface Advanced
Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB
Partition table type: Intel
Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB
Partition table type: Intel
New options :
Dump : No
Cylinder boundary : Yes
Allow partial last cylinder : No
Expert mode : No
New options :
Dump : No
Cylinder boundary : Yes
Allow partial last cylinder : No
Expert mode : No
Analyse Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57232 64 32
Current partition structure:
Partition sector doesn't have the endmark 0xAA55
Ask the user for vista mode
Allow partial last cylinder : No
search_vista_part: 0
search_part()
Disk /dev/sdb - 60 GB / 55 GiB - CHS 57232 64 32
Search for partition aborted
Results
Can't open backup.log file: No such file or directory
interface_load
interface_write()
No partition found or selected for recovery
simulate write!
write_mbr_i386: starting...
Store new MBR code
write_all_log_i386: starting...
No extended partition
TestDisk exited normally.
fixdisktable first output:
% ./fixdisktable -d /dev/sdb
Getting hard disk geometry
cylinders=57231, heads=64, sectors=32
end_offset: 2147482624
FfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSs
EXT2 partition at offset 56832, length=(41072.398 MB) 43067531264
Sectors: start= 111, end= 84116382, length= 84116272
Hd,Sec,Cyl: start(3,16,0) end(28,31,41072)
Done searching for partitions.
Nr AF Hd Sec Cyl Hd Sec Cyl Start Size ID
1 80 3 16 0 63 32 1023 111 84116273 83 (Interpretted)
1 80 3 16 0 63 224 255 111 84116273 83 (RAW)
1: 8003 1000 833f e0ff 6f00 0000 3183 0305
2: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
3: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
4: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
Do you wish to write this partition table to disk (yes/no)? no
fixdisktable second output:
% ./fixdisktable -d -r -v /dev/sdb
Getting hard disk geometry
cylinders=57231, heads=64, sectors=32
end_offset: 2147482624
FfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSsNnBbUuFfEeSs
NTFS partition at offset 17483776, length=(17592186043512.582 MB) 184467440727622 49216
Sectors: start= 34148, end=36028797017147916, length=36028797017113768
Hd,Sec,Cyl: start(43,5,16) end(16,12,2096265)
Done searching for partitions.
Nr AF Hd Sec Cyl Hd Sec Cyl Start Size ID
1 80 43 5 16 63 32 1023 34148 -1850199 07 (Interpretted)
1 80 43 5 16 63 224 255 34148 -1850199 07 (RAW)
1: 802b 0510 073f e0ff 6485 0000 a9c4 e3ff
2: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
3: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
4: 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000
Do you wish to write this partition table to disk (yes/no)? no
This string "FfEeSsNnBbUu" was repeating there for longer time and it was most probably related to debugging or a verbose mode of fixdisktable
As I have mentioned I will try to connect the disk directly to the computer and see what will happen.
Shall I try to correct the disk geometry to the one specified by manufacturer? Is it possible?
Any suggestions? -
Installing solaris on 2 hard disks (not raid or mirroring)
I'm installing solaris 10 but with 2 hard disk this time. Primary IDE is 20GB and secondary is 30 GB. I want to use both the disks for one solaris installation. That is i want to distribute my /, swap, /usr, /opt, /var etc. over the two hard disk, for example making swap, / and /var on the first hard drive and /opt, /usr and other slices on the 2nd hard disk.
During installation when i select the first drive to use for solaris it deselects the other and when i select the second disk it deselects the first one. Kindly help me out on this.I'm not asking for the best solution because i
understand it depends on the use. I was asking for
basic reasoning or logic. For example what if i make
/ partition of 20GB and make /opt only 200MB? or
/export/home only 50MB and /usr 25GB? or /var only
10MB? Will more than 90% knowlegdable experienced
system administrators will agree to that kind of
partitioning scheme?This might sound nit picky but it's not meant that way, but!, who gets to decide what is & what is not a knowlegdable experienced system administrator? Unless I've worked with you I have no idea on your reasoning or how or why you do things. On the flip side, what if I'm the dufus admin then even though you're right I think you're wrong.
truth i never undestood the logic or reasoning on how
much space each partition should have according to
the size of the space avaiable as well as the use of
system.That's why these things end up being religious.
I understand that one must learn by experience but
doesn't one should make educated well reasoned
judgements even during learning phase?In this case I never went near that.
The installer gives you a set of parameters during an initial install. You CAN take it or leave it.
docs.sun.com gives you a default scheme which you can take it or leave it.
If you search around enough you can find the rationale to support any decision that you make.
In the next version of Solaris, ZFS is reportedly going to ship.
How does this affect your question?
With ZFS specified filesystems will pull from a common storage pool. As long as the pool has space, any partition that needs space from that pool will automatically get it.
Then threads like this one should start to fade into the past.
Stated another way, if your partitioning scheme works for you then who's to say it's wrong?
alan
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Upgrading from Premium to Standard and Visa Versa
Hi all Our upgrading issues rumble on here at my workplace! We currently have 2 machines which are installed with CS2. We have (due to ordering issues - mistakes!) 1 x CS2 - CS5 STANDARD upgrade and 1 x CS5 to CS5.5 PREMIUM upgrade. My question is, i
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Does my Xsan server must to have Mac OS X Server installed? or just the Mac OS X is enough?
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Does Adobe CreatePDF support Mac System 10 Leopard OS?
Does Adobe CreatePDF support Mac System 10 Leopard OS?
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Configure oracle rac10g on Red Hat Linux Enterprise 4 and vmware
Can anybody tell how can I configure Oracle 10g RAC using Vmware and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4. I have two installations of Linux on vmware and I am able to ping inbetween two. A document will do the most.
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Private method in the comp controller
HI How do ui declare the private method in the componenet controller and declare the parameter one as the node and other as structure, when i click on methods tab it declears the public method with green logo in the implementation view, while i need