Lenovo Global Support Home. May 26, 2011 / Upgrading All Firmware on your Iomega IX2 or IX4 NAS Device. Upgrading All Firmware on your Iomega IX2 or IX4 NAS Device. The ‘Update’ icon you’ll be presented with a screen that shows the current firmware revision and a link to the ‘Iomega Software Update Web Site’. Halo 2 full. download free. Lenovo Global Support Home. May 26, 2011 / Upgrading All Firmware on your Iomega IX2 or IX4 NAS Device. Upgrading All Firmware on your Iomega IX2 or IX4 NAS Device. The ‘Update’ icon you’ll be presented with a screen that shows the current firmware revision and a link to the ‘Iomega Software Update Web Site’. Halo 2 full. download free. Free iomega storcenter ix2 software download download software at UpdateStar - 1,746,000 recognized programs - 5,228,000 known versions - Software News Home.
My ix2 is running a version lower than 3.3.2.29823, so I need to upgrade using ix2-ng-3.3.2.29823.tgz before updating to 4.0.8.23976? Then download and install the latest version 4.0.8.23976? On my laptop I am running Iomega StorCenter software to manage and access my NAS. View and Download Iomega Ix2-200 - StorCenter Network Storage NAS Server quick start manual online. Ix2-200 - StorCenter Network Storage NAS Server network hardware pdf manual download. Also for: Storcenter ix4-200d, Storcenter ix-series.
As some of you may have read previously I had a number of issues when I tried previously to upgrade my 2TB IX4 to make it into a 6TB IX4, whilst the disks were read and configured correctly, no matter what I tried I couldn’t configure any Data Protection on them. Over the weekend I had to remove a disk from one of my test systems due to an ongoing SMART issue with the drive, the drive itself is showing up OK with my BIOS but using a USB boot disk running SMART scanning software () I discovered an issue with the Spin Up Time Attribute that was causing me issues with NexentaStor (it was dropping the drive which is what caused me to do some in depth diags). This failure lead me down the path of replacing the disk, as luck would have it I have a total of 8 of these disks shared across two storage environments, the first being the test lab, the second being my Buffalo Terastation Pro II. Not wanting to decommission the TS Pro II until the data had been replicated to another device I decided to bite the bullet and see about upgrading the disks in the IX4 again, this time using the same 2TB Seagate Barracudas currently sitting in the 8TB unit.
Installing firmware on a new disk (Home Media)Connecting the disk. Connect the new disk to a Linux PC. You can use an USB- SATA converter, or connect the disk on an in- or extern SATA port. Note: the instructions below apply to Home Media Network Hard Drive (aka classic) only. Do not try with Home. Freelink - Convert the LinkStation into a Full-fledged. Build a NAS Device With an Old PC and Free Software. Build a NAS Device With an Old PC and Free Software.
A quick trip down to my local PC World (shocking but I wanted the disks the same day), I struggled to find Seagate Barracudas, I did however find some 2TB Western Digital EARS disks at a lower price than the Barracudas were listed. Going through the procedure of removing all the data from the IX4 I powered down the device and removed 3 of the old 500gb drives and replaced them with the new WD EARS drives, powered the unit back on and got the usual message about ' Data is unavailable due to a failure' and then a further request about wanting to overwrite unused drives to add them back into the system, what this process actually does is partition the drives into two partitions, the first is the OS for the IX4 whilst the second is the data partition. A quick check back after the drives have been added gives me the following. You have to remember that 4x1tb drives won’t give you 4tb of usable space in a raided environment. To replace the failed drive you should log onto the NAS device, Go to Settings and then you can check the Event Logs or click on Disks and see which of the drives has failed there. Take a note of the drive number (1 – 4), power down the NAS and open up the case.
Once opened up find the drive number and remove it, replacing it with a new drive (in this instance I would suggest purchasing a new drive from Iomega if the existing drive isn’t under warranty). Once the drive is fitted power on the NAS and allow the system to rebuild the raid array.
That should be all you need to do. Hello, Having problems with booting my StorCenter ix4-200d. After doing a format on all 4 disks (1TB each) the system is not booting anymore.
The screen is displaying the network and the usb symbol. Seems like the partition with the system on it is gone on all 4 disks. Hopefully there is somewhere a download or image file available with the OS partition.
Ecclesiastical deed poll pdf free. (or a disk taken out of an ix4-200d) Please let me know if you know where to get the system image or partition. Otherwise my StorCenter is bricked •.
One thing that I did is use the command DD from the IX4 to create a exact block copy of the first 2G partition on each drive. You can enable SSH from the dd if=/dev/sda1 of=/mnt/soho_storage/samba/shares/USB_CBM_Flash_Disk_1boot-ix4.img where USB_xxxxx is a thumb drive. I can not take any drive and attach it to a Linux desktop and dd the image back. I am curious if anyone has a ix4-200d Cloud Edition that they would want to share their dd image of the boot partition? I am not sure it will run on my box, but after these Seagate drives start dropping like flies and me loosing some data I am starting over with larger WD in a RAID 10. Hate to dredge up an old post, but I upgraded my IX4-200D drives from 1TB drives to 2TB the other week, and since I’ve done so I’m having some weird behavior. Basically, although I’ve hardly stored anything on the unit at allthe unit continues to state that it is down to less than 5% free space.
I’m thinking that expanding the drive somehow expanded the consumption in one of the other partitions that services the XFS array or something Anybody have any similar experiences or thoughts? I haven’t noted any bad behaviorjust the warning message thus far. I did the one drive at a time routine. It all has seemed to work fine (took forever).just the nuisance warning message about running out of space (which it most certainly is not). I did get mine upgraded to the recently released firmware, so now I’ve actually got Time Machine and AFP support that works again! When I did the one drive at a time, it didn’t realize the additional space until the last drive had been joined to the array completely if I remember correctly. I don’t have much on there right nowmaybe I should start over on it, but I hesitate to do so since the unit seems to be working just fine, save for the phantom error!
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James, the only thing I can think of is that when you upgraded the disk you didn’t destroy the array first but instead upgraded an existing one with new disks. I need to have a look at the new firmware as well as the firmware for the cloud edition (unfortunately Iomega require registration of a qualifying device before you can download it) to see what improvements it offers. I would definitely suggest trying again but this time when taking an image of the first partition make sure that it doesn’t have any array configured, when I did mine the entire process probably took no more than 30 – 40 minutes at most. I’ll have to try that. Just for what it’s worthI did let the built in firmware re-establish the data protection by changing the RAID type a few time to see if that would solve the warning, but it did not. I don’t even get the warning all of the timejust from time to time and typically when I’m doing a lot of writes to the NAS, such as a full-on system backup for one of my home machines or something.
I should really read more about the XFS backing this NAS, but I just haven’t had time lately to do so I’m using the Seagate Barracuda Green 2TB drives and as far as I know there is no way to disable the 4k sectors on these drives. Of course, Seagate states that their “smartalign” drive firmware handles everything for you, but I don’t have any performance data to support that claim since I don’t have any “before” drive swap performance numbers to compare to. So I’ll just have to live with it. I don’t think anyone’s ever confused the IX4-200D as being some barn burner NAS anyway 😉 •. Before trying any of the following suggestions I would definitely see about taking a backup of your existing drives (potentially difficult I know but I don’t want you losing any of your data). I would suggest using something like Acronis to backup each drive and take note that the drives come out from the bottom up (so disk 0 is the bottom disk in the unit), if I were you I would get a marker pen and number each drive so you know the order to put them back in. Once you have a back up (or in case you’re going to by pass this step) the next thing you want to do is run up a copy of Parted Magic () to look at the structure of your drives, it could be that one of them has a physical fault on it and that’s why it’s failing to load up properly.
If after you have inspected all your drives and discovered that they are all ok then you may want to see about replacing only three of the drives back in the unit, this forces to load the unit up again but will complain about a failed drive, I am only suggesting a single drive at the moment because once you remove more than one from the boot process you’re going to lose your data (unless of course you’re only using raid 1 anyway?). If none of the above steps work then the next thing to do is try and find a Linux OS that will be able to read the raid information, unfortunately as thats not really my strong point I can’t really help there too much. The final option open is finding someone with an IX4 locally to you to see what happens if you put your disks into their unit, it ‘could’ be an issue with the IX4 but in all honesty I am not really expecting that to be the case. I’ve got a serious problem that I hope someone can help me with. My ix4 reported a drive failure. I had a drive of the same capacity, but not the exact same type, which I swapped in for the failed drive.
It didn’t work, and reported that all 4 drives need overwrite confirmation. That is, it thinks all 4 drives are new.
I swapped the faulty drive back in, but it is still saying that all drives are new and require overwrite confirmation. I can’t lose the data on these drives – it has 10 years of photos on it. I am fairly tech-savvy, so have installed PuTTY on my Windows PC to get SSH access, which works. What I don’t know is what commands to use to either pull the files off the NAS onto a local drive, or to force the RAID reconstruction to go ahead regardless, and not overwrite the drives.
Any help gratefully received. Simon, Thanks for the write up.
It was your article that actually inspired me to proceed with upgrading my unit. Your article, coupled with the write ups on the NAS Central Forums () were of great help. I pretty much followed your steps by way of removing all shares, pulling all drives except the 1st, etc. Like I mention below, all-in-all, its a pretty easy process, it just takes a lot of time and patients. Below is my setup and the steps I followed. The firmware is what I had to start with and is what I’m currently running now that the upgrade is complete. I saw no reason to upgrade it, as the unit’s been working flawless for several years now.
Ablebits Auto Bcc Crackle. Again, just wanted to say thanks and give back to the community my experience to share with others. Jim My Firmware Version = 2.1.30.8298 (I am now at 4 x 2TB on this ver) Original drives = 4 x Seagate ST3500412ASCC32 New drives = 4 x WD20EZRX-00DC0B0 (Pins 5&6 and 7&8 Jumpered – 3 Gb/s Sata and 512k sectors, respectively) These are the Advanced Format 6Gbs SATA III Green Drives. Backup ALL data you want to keep. Delete ALL shares from ix4-200d. Quick erase all drives – This pretty much defaults the unit back into Raid 5 mode. At least that was my experience. My unit was originally configured and running in Raid 5 mode before I started this venture.
I think I tried putting it into JBOD after removing all the shares and before doing the quick erase, and then experienced the unit defaulting back into Raid 5 mode once the quick erase was finished – your mileage may vary Removed original Seagate Drive 1 from the ix4-200d and took an image of the drive in separate PC for backup purposes. This took ~7hrs. To image the drive to a 2TB WD USB My Passport on a USB 2.0 port on the PC.
Put the original Seagate Drive 1 back into the ix4-200d and removed original Seagate drives 2,3, and 4, replacing them with 3 brand new WD20EZRX drives. This rebuilt the array (Raid 5 from earlier step) to ~5.4TB. This took nearly 22 hrs. Changed data protection to JBOD, shut down the ix4-200d and replaced the remaining original Seagate drive in position #1 with then last remaining WD20EZRX drive. The ix4-200d recognized this pretty quickly as 7.2TB of JBOD storage space once rebooted. Changed data protection back to Raid5 and let it rebuild the array to approximately 5.4TB.
This took nearly 24 hrs. The WD20EZRX drives were chosen for a couple of reasons: 1.) They had the fastest sustained host to/from drive transfer rate (145 MB/s) I could find among Seagate and WD drives at the time that also incorporated 2.) a jumper-configurable 512k sector option (short pins 7&8) that matched the original Seagate drives without having to get messy with a software solution, and 3.) a jumper-configurable buffer-to-host option (short pins 5&6) for 3 Gb/s to match the original Seagate drives 4.) they were relatively easy to find. I did not look at any other drives than Seagate and WD.
All-in-all, the upgrade went fairly smooth. What’s not mentioned throughout a lot of the threads I found is that once the unit gets defaulted after the drive erasure process, it will reset your IP settings. You can watch the display (if its still working, mine is starting to fade) or your DHCP server and figure out the IP to get back to the web interface.
A lot of the drive “confirmation” messages you see on the display actually have to be performed via the web user interface, and they’re not exactly named to same. But with a little intuitiveness, you can figure out what to do. Good luck with your upgrade. Jim, I’m wondering what your experience has been using WE20EZRX drives in this scenerio. I’m about to install the same model in a raid setup, although not using an IX4 to do so.
Did setting the 7-8 jumper put the drives into 512 byte block compatibility mode as it does with WD20EARS? Documentation from WD is very spotty in this regard. In my case, I’m planning to attach 3x WD20EZRX and 3x WD20EARS to a Dell Perc6 controller and run the whole lot as a 6 disk raid 5 array. The WD20EARS have been running for about 18 months in a RAID 5 array and I’ve had no issues with them.
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I’m hoping that the WD20EZRX drives will fare just as well. Shaun, Yes, the WD20EZRX drives are still running without a hitch in my IX4. The 7-8 jumper does indeed put the drives into the 512K compatibility mode. I will agree that the information on this is sparse and not very clear. The following documents refer to this jumper as the Advanced Format Jumper Setting, and needs to be set BEFORE you prepare your drive for use. As I’m sure you’re aware, best practice is to use all the same make & model drives in an array.
But I’m not going to tell you what you’re about to do won’t work. However, performance of the array could suffer due to differing characteristics and performance metrics between the different drives. Again, your mileage may vary. In looking at the 2 different models you’re about to use, you need to set the 5-6 jumper on the EZRX drives too.
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The EARS drives you have are only 3Gbs, as are the original drives and the controller in the IX4-200d Good luck with your endeavor, Jim •. Hi there, I’m glad you were eventually able to upgrade your NAS:). I’ve had a Iomega StorCenter ix4-200d 8TB for almost two years now and today it froze, so we pulled the power plug and when it booted up, it proceeded with doing a data security check due to an improper shutdown and then the reg light started to flash, saying the second HDD had failed.
My configuration is RAID5, so I have 5.5 TB of usable space out of a potential 8TB (unformatted capacity). Can I use a 2TB WD Green drive to replace the problematic drive and will I need to backup all my data before I attempt a rebuild? I’m able to access my data just fine with no performance lag though so I’m assuming it just needs a rebuild once the hard drive is inserted. Hi there mate. I have an ix4 200d with 4x1tb drives from factory in a raid0 (I’m after max capacity no redundancy). Can I purchase 4 x 2tb or even 4x3tb, rip out existing drives (losing all data is ok I have it replicated elsewhere), put in new drives, boot it, detect new disks via web interface and set up new array based on the new disks? Bit confused about the need to keep existing drive?
Does that mean I should replace three of the disks, boot it, create a new array, then reboot it and put the fourth new drive in and once again create an array a second time? Thanks Brad •. Hi Brad, The way I would approach this would be to remove all the data before doing any of the work as well as removing the Raid 0 set from the drives leaving you with raw disks. I would then power down the unit and remove 3 of the drives and place one of the new drives in the unit and power it back on, when you get to the console it should tell you that the drive needs to be initialised, do that and let it put the OS onto the drive (essentially the IX4 OS is striped across the drives but will work from a single drive).
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Once the drive has built up I would power down the unit again and either remove the first drive or place a second new drive into the unit and go through the process again. Eventually you should have all 4 new drives in the unit with just the OS partition installed, at this point you can create your new raid set. Initialising the raid set will take it’s time so be patient (days, rather than hours). You don’t want to have a raid set on the disks when you’re replacing them because it will take weeks to install and initialise all the drives successfully. As far as the spec of the drives are concerned, you ‘should’ be able to place larger drives in there but it was hit and miss for me whether drives would work. As it stands I would probably consider either the WD Red or Seagate NAS drives because they are used to NAS usage (although the IX4 isn’t aware of the drives themselves).
As an alternative I do have links to a couple of Acronis images that allow you to restore the OS partition to the new disk but I would probably go down that route only if you trash the system and need to recover. To recap, destroy the array, power down, pull 3 disks, replace with one, power up and let it add the new disk to the system, rinse and repeat for the remaining drives. Create array, go on holiday and come back to put the data back on.
Changes in Version 1. Adobe Premiere Pro Cc Crack Dll Fixer more. 4.4.14439 - Release date • Corrects a problem passing arguments when executing Additional Actions menu scripts • Corrects issues connecting and disconnecting iSCSI drives in Windows 8 • Corrects documentation and UI errors • Fixes some translation problems in the Portuguese and Arabic language versions • Fixes automatic start for Twonky Media Server in Windows 7 and 8 NOTE: LSM version 1.4.4.14439 is recommended to detect and manage network storage devices running LifeLine 4.0.4. You need at least LSM 1.4.3 for LifeLine devices running 4.0.2 or above. I happily had an iConnect and with WD hard drive attached directly connected to the Gigabit Lan Ethernet port on my BT Homehub providing a NAS and media server for my wireless network.
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Since installing this version of the storage manager I've lost connection to it. If I disconnect the iConnect and drive and directly attach them to my desktop pc via Ethernet then the storage manager finds them, but not very practical when I had an always on resource Reconnect to homehub again and the storage manager software reports them as unavailable. The iConnect is running firmware version 2.5.26.18966 Any ideas what may be wrong?
My ix2 is running a version lower than 3.3.2.29823, so I need to upgrade using ix2-ng-3.3.2.29823.tgz before updating to 4.0.8.23976? Then download and install the latest version 4.0.8.23976? On my laptop I am running Iomega StorCenter software to manage and access my NAS. View and Download Iomega Ix2-200 - StorCenter Network Storage NAS Server quick start manual online. Ix2-200 - StorCenter Network Storage NAS Server network hardware pdf manual download. Also for: Storcenter ix4-200d, Storcenter ix-series.
As some of you may have read previously I had a number of issues when I tried previously to upgrade my 2TB IX4 to make it into a 6TB IX4, whilst the disks were read and configured correctly, no matter what I tried I couldn’t configure any Data Protection on them. Over the weekend I had to remove a disk from one of my test systems due to an ongoing SMART issue with the drive, the drive itself is showing up OK with my BIOS but using a USB boot disk running SMART scanning software () I discovered an issue with the Spin Up Time Attribute that was causing me issues with NexentaStor (it was dropping the drive which is what caused me to do some in depth diags). This failure lead me down the path of replacing the disk, as luck would have it I have a total of 8 of these disks shared across two storage environments, the first being the test lab, the second being my Buffalo Terastation Pro II. Not wanting to decommission the TS Pro II until the data had been replicated to another device I decided to bite the bullet and see about upgrading the disks in the IX4 again, this time using the same 2TB Seagate Barracudas currently sitting in the 8TB unit.
Installing firmware on a new disk (Home Media)Connecting the disk. Connect the new disk to a Linux PC. You can use an USB- SATA converter, or connect the disk on an in- or extern SATA port. Note: the instructions below apply to Home Media Network Hard Drive (aka classic) only. Do not try with Home. Freelink - Convert the LinkStation into a Full-fledged. Build a NAS Device With an Old PC and Free Software. Build a NAS Device With an Old PC and Free Software.
A quick trip down to my local PC World (shocking but I wanted the disks the same day), I struggled to find Seagate Barracudas, I did however find some 2TB Western Digital EARS disks at a lower price than the Barracudas were listed. Going through the procedure of removing all the data from the IX4 I powered down the device and removed 3 of the old 500gb drives and replaced them with the new WD EARS drives, powered the unit back on and got the usual message about ' Data is unavailable due to a failure' and then a further request about wanting to overwrite unused drives to add them back into the system, what this process actually does is partition the drives into two partitions, the first is the OS for the IX4 whilst the second is the data partition. A quick check back after the drives have been added gives me the following. You have to remember that 4x1tb drives won’t give you 4tb of usable space in a raided environment. To replace the failed drive you should log onto the NAS device, Go to Settings and then you can check the Event Logs or click on Disks and see which of the drives has failed there. Take a note of the drive number (1 – 4), power down the NAS and open up the case.
Once opened up find the drive number and remove it, replacing it with a new drive (in this instance I would suggest purchasing a new drive from Iomega if the existing drive isn’t under warranty). Once the drive is fitted power on the NAS and allow the system to rebuild the raid array.
That should be all you need to do. Hello, Having problems with booting my StorCenter ix4-200d. After doing a format on all 4 disks (1TB each) the system is not booting anymore.
The screen is displaying the network and the usb symbol. Seems like the partition with the system on it is gone on all 4 disks. Hopefully there is somewhere a download or image file available with the OS partition.
Ecclesiastical deed poll pdf free. (or a disk taken out of an ix4-200d) Please let me know if you know where to get the system image or partition. Otherwise my StorCenter is bricked •.
One thing that I did is use the command DD from the IX4 to create a exact block copy of the first 2G partition on each drive. You can enable SSH from the dd if=/dev/sda1 of=/mnt/soho_storage/samba/shares/USB_CBM_Flash_Disk_1boot-ix4.img where USB_xxxxx is a thumb drive. I can not take any drive and attach it to a Linux desktop and dd the image back. I am curious if anyone has a ix4-200d Cloud Edition that they would want to share their dd image of the boot partition? I am not sure it will run on my box, but after these Seagate drives start dropping like flies and me loosing some data I am starting over with larger WD in a RAID 10. Hate to dredge up an old post, but I upgraded my IX4-200D drives from 1TB drives to 2TB the other week, and since I’ve done so I’m having some weird behavior. Basically, although I’ve hardly stored anything on the unit at allthe unit continues to state that it is down to less than 5% free space.
I’m thinking that expanding the drive somehow expanded the consumption in one of the other partitions that services the XFS array or something Anybody have any similar experiences or thoughts? I haven’t noted any bad behaviorjust the warning message thus far. I did the one drive at a time routine. It all has seemed to work fine (took forever).just the nuisance warning message about running out of space (which it most certainly is not). I did get mine upgraded to the recently released firmware, so now I’ve actually got Time Machine and AFP support that works again! When I did the one drive at a time, it didn’t realize the additional space until the last drive had been joined to the array completely if I remember correctly. I don’t have much on there right nowmaybe I should start over on it, but I hesitate to do so since the unit seems to be working just fine, save for the phantom error!
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James, the only thing I can think of is that when you upgraded the disk you didn’t destroy the array first but instead upgraded an existing one with new disks. I need to have a look at the new firmware as well as the firmware for the cloud edition (unfortunately Iomega require registration of a qualifying device before you can download it) to see what improvements it offers. I would definitely suggest trying again but this time when taking an image of the first partition make sure that it doesn’t have any array configured, when I did mine the entire process probably took no more than 30 – 40 minutes at most. I’ll have to try that. Just for what it’s worthI did let the built in firmware re-establish the data protection by changing the RAID type a few time to see if that would solve the warning, but it did not. I don’t even get the warning all of the timejust from time to time and typically when I’m doing a lot of writes to the NAS, such as a full-on system backup for one of my home machines or something.
I should really read more about the XFS backing this NAS, but I just haven’t had time lately to do so I’m using the Seagate Barracuda Green 2TB drives and as far as I know there is no way to disable the 4k sectors on these drives. Of course, Seagate states that their “smartalign” drive firmware handles everything for you, but I don’t have any performance data to support that claim since I don’t have any “before” drive swap performance numbers to compare to. So I’ll just have to live with it. I don’t think anyone’s ever confused the IX4-200D as being some barn burner NAS anyway 😉 •. Before trying any of the following suggestions I would definitely see about taking a backup of your existing drives (potentially difficult I know but I don’t want you losing any of your data). I would suggest using something like Acronis to backup each drive and take note that the drives come out from the bottom up (so disk 0 is the bottom disk in the unit), if I were you I would get a marker pen and number each drive so you know the order to put them back in. Once you have a back up (or in case you’re going to by pass this step) the next thing you want to do is run up a copy of Parted Magic () to look at the structure of your drives, it could be that one of them has a physical fault on it and that’s why it’s failing to load up properly.
If after you have inspected all your drives and discovered that they are all ok then you may want to see about replacing only three of the drives back in the unit, this forces to load the unit up again but will complain about a failed drive, I am only suggesting a single drive at the moment because once you remove more than one from the boot process you’re going to lose your data (unless of course you’re only using raid 1 anyway?). If none of the above steps work then the next thing to do is try and find a Linux OS that will be able to read the raid information, unfortunately as thats not really my strong point I can’t really help there too much. The final option open is finding someone with an IX4 locally to you to see what happens if you put your disks into their unit, it ‘could’ be an issue with the IX4 but in all honesty I am not really expecting that to be the case. I’ve got a serious problem that I hope someone can help me with. My ix4 reported a drive failure. I had a drive of the same capacity, but not the exact same type, which I swapped in for the failed drive.
It didn’t work, and reported that all 4 drives need overwrite confirmation. That is, it thinks all 4 drives are new.
I swapped the faulty drive back in, but it is still saying that all drives are new and require overwrite confirmation. I can’t lose the data on these drives – it has 10 years of photos on it. I am fairly tech-savvy, so have installed PuTTY on my Windows PC to get SSH access, which works. What I don’t know is what commands to use to either pull the files off the NAS onto a local drive, or to force the RAID reconstruction to go ahead regardless, and not overwrite the drives.
Any help gratefully received. Simon, Thanks for the write up.
It was your article that actually inspired me to proceed with upgrading my unit. Your article, coupled with the write ups on the NAS Central Forums () were of great help. I pretty much followed your steps by way of removing all shares, pulling all drives except the 1st, etc. Like I mention below, all-in-all, its a pretty easy process, it just takes a lot of time and patients. Below is my setup and the steps I followed. The firmware is what I had to start with and is what I’m currently running now that the upgrade is complete. I saw no reason to upgrade it, as the unit’s been working flawless for several years now.
Ablebits Auto Bcc Crackle. Again, just wanted to say thanks and give back to the community my experience to share with others. Jim My Firmware Version = 2.1.30.8298 (I am now at 4 x 2TB on this ver) Original drives = 4 x Seagate ST3500412ASCC32 New drives = 4 x WD20EZRX-00DC0B0 (Pins 5&6 and 7&8 Jumpered – 3 Gb/s Sata and 512k sectors, respectively) These are the Advanced Format 6Gbs SATA III Green Drives. Backup ALL data you want to keep. Delete ALL shares from ix4-200d. Quick erase all drives – This pretty much defaults the unit back into Raid 5 mode. At least that was my experience. My unit was originally configured and running in Raid 5 mode before I started this venture.
I think I tried putting it into JBOD after removing all the shares and before doing the quick erase, and then experienced the unit defaulting back into Raid 5 mode once the quick erase was finished – your mileage may vary Removed original Seagate Drive 1 from the ix4-200d and took an image of the drive in separate PC for backup purposes. This took ~7hrs. To image the drive to a 2TB WD USB My Passport on a USB 2.0 port on the PC.
Put the original Seagate Drive 1 back into the ix4-200d and removed original Seagate drives 2,3, and 4, replacing them with 3 brand new WD20EZRX drives. This rebuilt the array (Raid 5 from earlier step) to ~5.4TB. This took nearly 22 hrs. Changed data protection to JBOD, shut down the ix4-200d and replaced the remaining original Seagate drive in position #1 with then last remaining WD20EZRX drive. The ix4-200d recognized this pretty quickly as 7.2TB of JBOD storage space once rebooted. Changed data protection back to Raid5 and let it rebuild the array to approximately 5.4TB.
This took nearly 24 hrs. The WD20EZRX drives were chosen for a couple of reasons: 1.) They had the fastest sustained host to/from drive transfer rate (145 MB/s) I could find among Seagate and WD drives at the time that also incorporated 2.) a jumper-configurable 512k sector option (short pins 7&8) that matched the original Seagate drives without having to get messy with a software solution, and 3.) a jumper-configurable buffer-to-host option (short pins 5&6) for 3 Gb/s to match the original Seagate drives 4.) they were relatively easy to find. I did not look at any other drives than Seagate and WD.
All-in-all, the upgrade went fairly smooth. What’s not mentioned throughout a lot of the threads I found is that once the unit gets defaulted after the drive erasure process, it will reset your IP settings. You can watch the display (if its still working, mine is starting to fade) or your DHCP server and figure out the IP to get back to the web interface.
A lot of the drive “confirmation” messages you see on the display actually have to be performed via the web user interface, and they’re not exactly named to same. But with a little intuitiveness, you can figure out what to do. Good luck with your upgrade. Jim, I’m wondering what your experience has been using WE20EZRX drives in this scenerio. I’m about to install the same model in a raid setup, although not using an IX4 to do so.
Did setting the 7-8 jumper put the drives into 512 byte block compatibility mode as it does with WD20EARS? Documentation from WD is very spotty in this regard. In my case, I’m planning to attach 3x WD20EZRX and 3x WD20EARS to a Dell Perc6 controller and run the whole lot as a 6 disk raid 5 array. The WD20EARS have been running for about 18 months in a RAID 5 array and I’ve had no issues with them.
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I’m hoping that the WD20EZRX drives will fare just as well. Shaun, Yes, the WD20EZRX drives are still running without a hitch in my IX4. The 7-8 jumper does indeed put the drives into the 512K compatibility mode. I will agree that the information on this is sparse and not very clear. The following documents refer to this jumper as the Advanced Format Jumper Setting, and needs to be set BEFORE you prepare your drive for use. As I’m sure you’re aware, best practice is to use all the same make & model drives in an array.
But I’m not going to tell you what you’re about to do won’t work. However, performance of the array could suffer due to differing characteristics and performance metrics between the different drives. Again, your mileage may vary. In looking at the 2 different models you’re about to use, you need to set the 5-6 jumper on the EZRX drives too.
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The EARS drives you have are only 3Gbs, as are the original drives and the controller in the IX4-200d Good luck with your endeavor, Jim •. Hi there, I’m glad you were eventually able to upgrade your NAS:). I’ve had a Iomega StorCenter ix4-200d 8TB for almost two years now and today it froze, so we pulled the power plug and when it booted up, it proceeded with doing a data security check due to an improper shutdown and then the reg light started to flash, saying the second HDD had failed.
My configuration is RAID5, so I have 5.5 TB of usable space out of a potential 8TB (unformatted capacity). Can I use a 2TB WD Green drive to replace the problematic drive and will I need to backup all my data before I attempt a rebuild? I’m able to access my data just fine with no performance lag though so I’m assuming it just needs a rebuild once the hard drive is inserted. Hi there mate. I have an ix4 200d with 4x1tb drives from factory in a raid0 (I’m after max capacity no redundancy). Can I purchase 4 x 2tb or even 4x3tb, rip out existing drives (losing all data is ok I have it replicated elsewhere), put in new drives, boot it, detect new disks via web interface and set up new array based on the new disks? Bit confused about the need to keep existing drive?
Does that mean I should replace three of the disks, boot it, create a new array, then reboot it and put the fourth new drive in and once again create an array a second time? Thanks Brad •. Hi Brad, The way I would approach this would be to remove all the data before doing any of the work as well as removing the Raid 0 set from the drives leaving you with raw disks. I would then power down the unit and remove 3 of the drives and place one of the new drives in the unit and power it back on, when you get to the console it should tell you that the drive needs to be initialised, do that and let it put the OS onto the drive (essentially the IX4 OS is striped across the drives but will work from a single drive).
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Once the drive has built up I would power down the unit again and either remove the first drive or place a second new drive into the unit and go through the process again. Eventually you should have all 4 new drives in the unit with just the OS partition installed, at this point you can create your new raid set. Initialising the raid set will take it’s time so be patient (days, rather than hours). You don’t want to have a raid set on the disks when you’re replacing them because it will take weeks to install and initialise all the drives successfully. As far as the spec of the drives are concerned, you ‘should’ be able to place larger drives in there but it was hit and miss for me whether drives would work. As it stands I would probably consider either the WD Red or Seagate NAS drives because they are used to NAS usage (although the IX4 isn’t aware of the drives themselves).
As an alternative I do have links to a couple of Acronis images that allow you to restore the OS partition to the new disk but I would probably go down that route only if you trash the system and need to recover. To recap, destroy the array, power down, pull 3 disks, replace with one, power up and let it add the new disk to the system, rinse and repeat for the remaining drives. Create array, go on holiday and come back to put the data back on.
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Changes in Version 1. Adobe Premiere Pro Cc Crack Dll Fixer more. 4.4.14439 - Release date • Corrects a problem passing arguments when executing Additional Actions menu scripts • Corrects issues connecting and disconnecting iSCSI drives in Windows 8 • Corrects documentation and UI errors • Fixes some translation problems in the Portuguese and Arabic language versions • Fixes automatic start for Twonky Media Server in Windows 7 and 8 NOTE: LSM version 1.4.4.14439 is recommended to detect and manage network storage devices running LifeLine 4.0.4. You need at least LSM 1.4.3 for LifeLine devices running 4.0.2 or above. I happily had an iConnect and with WD hard drive attached directly connected to the Gigabit Lan Ethernet port on my BT Homehub providing a NAS and media server for my wireless network.
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Since installing this version of the storage manager I've lost connection to it. If I disconnect the iConnect and drive and directly attach them to my desktop pc via Ethernet then the storage manager finds them, but not very practical when I had an always on resource Reconnect to homehub again and the storage manager software reports them as unavailable. The iConnect is running firmware version 2.5.26.18966 Any ideas what may be wrong?