System error code: As an explanation: Your hard disk is designed such that the probability that each sector becomes unreadable is really low. The hard disk has a few spare sectors. If a sector becomes damaged, the hard disk replaces this sector with one of those spare sectors. The good case is that the hard disk detects that a sector has problems while still being able to read the data in this sector e.
I don't think there is a log file, but I'm not sure. Whenever I've had to run chkdsk on a PC, I've always had a monitor hooked up to it. You should find relevant information in the event log of your server. I just ran it on my VM and didn't see anything there, but then again, I didn't have any errors. Now that's useful info. Wonder where I saw those mount letters the other day?? BTW, I have 8 physical disks in this thing for a total of 2. It's an older repurposed computer with a PIII. Does the job That could potentially take days to complete.
You could speed up the process by narrowing down which mount point is giving you problems. If it's only a few files, you could look don't change anything! Once you find out which mount point is hosting those files, run chkdsk on that mount point. I found out how Too much stuff to look through to find the drive manualy.
The 1st drive is running now labled 1k oddly enough and it found 5 the exact number of files that are causing CRC that were unindexed. Specifically, it said "Processed 5 unindexed files". Well, I don't know what processed means, but maybe that did it? More to follow. You should have 7 mount points listed. The file structure matches the UNC path once you get past "shares", so it shouldn't be too difficult to find the 5 files in question.
Just go through the mount points one at a time until you find the files. I don't think so. Well, I have not forgotten about you guys trying to help. Here's the deal:. Since then, WHS has been offline and This is terribly frustrating. Please, please just don't lose the video's for which I have not copied all to DVD yet of my children. I'm not sure where to go from here.
Usually, to troubleshoot a harware problem, I unplug everything except the boot disk. Can I do this in WHS? If you can, the problem is the hard drive. If the problem is the file itself, you can recover the file. If the problem is the hard drive, you can repair the drive. But if the data is important, you may want to recover it. Run command prompt as administrator. Then press Enter button. If the problem persist, you might need to format the disk.
Format will remove all data in the disk.
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