Tag whs

When Home Servers Go Tits-up! 2

I have spent quite some time on several occassions on here praising the awesomeness that is Windows Home Server. So it’s only fair that when the shit hits the fan, I spend a similar amount of time cursing the entire ancestoral history of everyone involved with Windows Home Server!
My machine is the fantastic (if terribly named) Tranquil PC T7-HSG with a 500gb hard drive of its own and an attached USB 1TB WD green power hard drive. This setup has been running around 9 months now without a single issue. I have not even needed to log onto the machine since I installed around 10 months ago as it quietly kept itself up to date and served my storage and backup needs. During that time we have had probably five or six power outages and each time its just been a case of switching it back on and it just resumed it’s duties faithfully without a murmur of discontent.
BUT, in the last week or two I have had some issues which have begun to snowball a little out of control. Occasionally I would request a file from it’s storage and it would not be available due to an “I/O error”. After a couple of days of assuming this was a new ‘feature’ of my new Snow Leopard installation, I did the unthinkable and actually went down to the workroom to physically check the machine!
What I noticed was that though the USB drive had its power light on, there seemed to be no disk activity. I cycled the power and low and behold the problem was fixed… for about 24 hours. I continued this monotonous pattern for a few days (just no time to investigate properly) until I started getting messages about file conflicts as well as the USB drive occassionally dissapearing from the storage pool. On more than one occasion I have seen messages about bad blocks and other ugly things such as extremely slow response on explorer.exe tasks such as browsing the filesystem whilst using remote desktop. Some something is seriously up with this hitherto flawless machine. Furthermore the backup service refuses to start and file transfer from the WHS machine to other machines is incredibly slow (
So I needed to make time and start to investigate the root cause. Scandisk on the larger drive seems to go extremely slowly, so slowly it hadnt got past the index scan in 8 hours (bear in mind only about 400gb of the 1tb is actually used). Getting a little panicky I thought I would start copying the REALLY important data such as photos and family videos off the machine, but this would fail on many of the files with the same “I/O error” as earlier. I unplugged the USB drive and attached it to another Windows 7 PC and tried to physically copy the files over from the drive… again more failure. Seeing as these files are so valuable I am using folder duplication for those shares (meaning a physical copy is kept on both the hard drives) which should mean if one drive is failed then I should be able to retrieve them from the other drive. So I tried to copy them directly from the 500gb internal drive…. failure!!
So at this stage I see the problem as being one of several things:
- One or both hard drives is failing
- One or both of the hard drives is corrupt
- The WHS db or ‘tombstones’ are messed up
- The actual files themselves really are corrupt and un-recoverable!
My best option right now according to the very knowledgable folks at the wegotserved forums is to try a server recovery. This is basically a reinstallation of WHS that doesn’t touch the data. In the process I will end up with a new db and all the tombstones will be rebuilt. This may be enough for me to get my important data off the machine. Then I can start using some disk utilities to try and establish the exact problems with the drives and replace them if necessary. I will embark on this project tonight and cross my fingers!
The thing that has angered me is that there is no early warning of these problems in any logs. OK I understand a total and sudden complete failure of a drive would be impossible to warn about, but this seems like a slow corruption which therefore should be detectable and thus I should have been receiving big flashy warnings on my connected machines for a few weeks so that recovering the data to other machines could be embarked on as early as possible.
I’ll keep you posted on my progress and the results in case you should hit a similar problem.

I have spent quite some time on several occassions on here praising the awesomeness that is Windows Home Server. So it’s only fair that when the shit hits the fan, I spend a similar amount of time cursing the entire ancestoral history of everyone involved with Windows Home Server! continue reading »

Tranquil PC T7-HSG Review – The Ultimate Windows Home Server? 1

Feb18
Low power consumption doesnt mean low performance

Low power consumption doesn't mean low performance

So Windows Home Server is a chunk of code I have been very impressed with for a long time, even in Beta I trusted it completely and it has filled several needs in our house without a single hiccup. But the time came when I needed to run it on some decent and well considered hardware. continue reading »

Install Windows Home Server From A USB Stick 2

Feb16

Just wanted to point out an excellent guide on how to install WHS from a USB stick. Why on earth would someone want to do that? Well if you have bought any of the machines specifically designed for WHS you will likely find that they have no optical media drive as they are designed to be headless, quiet, never touched machines.

In my case I got the Tranquil PC T7 (review coming soon!) and used the option to buy without the WHS software as I already had a disk/license. Thus I needed a way to install WHS without buying an external DVD drive that I would only ever use once.

Some other manufacturers use a restore partition to get around the problem, but wouldn’t that space be better used for actual server storage? So owners of such machines may consider scrubbing that partition and adding it to the main WHS volume sets, and resinstalling WHS.

Anyway here is the guide, it’s crystal clear but if you need help just ask :)

INSTALL WHS USING ONLY A USB STICK

Coming Soon! 0

Nov30

I have prepared a few things that are covered really badly the general review press recently that are close to fruition.

continue reading »

Microsoft Fails To Follow Through, Again 3

Jul9

That lovely, big, cuddly, megacorp Microsoft is getting on my nerves recently. I am not one of those moron’s that hates Microsoft because I think it’s cool (though I could probably register high on many other moron measurements). I like a lot of Microsoft products, I have defended them in the past and I have praised them in the past. But these days they seem to have lost all coherence in some of their divisions.

I have bitched sometime long ago about the lack of content for all those poor people who have payed through the nose for a copy of Vista Ultimate (especially if they paid retail price… ouch!). For all those extra pennies paid for the ‘Ultimate’ version, what have they got in terms of value? A couple of very crappy games, video desktops, sound themes and disk encryption that about 0.0001% of the world might actually use.

But their latest loss of interest focuses it seems on Windows Home Server, which, as you might know I am in the process of resurrecting at home. Don’t get me wrong, the core product is superb. It runs on just about any old hardware thrown together, its backup and restore features cannot be beaten by any product on the market, and the remote RDP stuff is great.

But what could have been its crowning glory is the add-ins feature. They make it sound so simple! Drop in community written add-ins for extra functionality! Simply download to the \Software\add-ins directory and its ready to install in the WHS console. Yeah…. not so much!

I am yet to come across a useful add-in that doesn’t require some seriously hackery to install. For example, the add-in that probably 90% of users look for as soon as they get WHS is a torrent add-in. The most popular (in fact pretty much the ‘only’) is the uTorrent add-in. Let me give a brief synopsis of the installation procedure for that.

- Create a new admin account
- Download utorrent add-in
- Download Windows Resource Kit
- Download anyservice installer
- Download uTorrent
- Download uTorrent web gui
- Log on as your new admin account
- Install WRK
- Install uTorrent
- Configure uTorrent to use only ‘real’ paths instead of network WHS shares
- Extract and install the webgui
- Using a combination of WRK and the anyservice installer, create a custom service that runs uTorrent
- Configure service to run as the new admin user
- Registry hack for the service to run the correct .exe
- NOW you can drop your add-in into the folder and install it
- Finally spend several hours fixing permission issues and the like for the whole thing to actually work

This is actually one of the least technical installs! There are power saving add-ins that should be inbuilt functionality which require a combination of registry hacks and sysinternals to stop core processes from loading for christ’s sake!

The product has been out for a long time now and there are no ‘offical’ add-ins, the SDK is cursory at best. The problem here is that the product is SBS2003 with the appropriate apps hacked onto the top. But as I have said the apps hacked onto the top do a good job. The problem is that the add-ins are crippled by the fact this is SBS2003 with hacks, as there is absolutley no thought given to the under-the-hood framework needed to make this extendable. The apparent user friendliness (Microsoft’s supposed forte) of the WHS console is completely isolated to that part of the OS alone. Developers of add-ins are forced to hack their way through a mountain of unneccesary limitations and ’should-have-been-removed’ remnants of the business product to get anything to work through an add-in.

Just look at that routine for installing the uTorrent add-in… how many steps would your parents or grandparents get through before throwing the thing out of the window?

Netgear WG311T Working on Windows Home Server 2

Jul7

OK, hopefully I am now back with a bitch bang. No really it’s a bitch and moan about Netgear drivers, but it’s also one of those rare situations where I can also offer a solution. continue reading »

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