Broken Mirror
#1
I've asked this question in a more technical place but one never knows what wisdom one might discover on the lounge:

I have a Windows NT 4.0 server with mirrored discs. As far as I can tell the system is running normally. However Disk Administrator shows the partitions as "Broken". How can I unbreak them?

The only available choice in the Fault Tolerance menu is "Break Mirror". I would like to restore the mirror or at least get one working disc out of it. I fear if I "break mirror" the system may not boot.
"I may be old, but I'm not dead."
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#2
Is the OS installed on the mirror? It is strange to me that Disk Admin shows it as Broken, but offers you the option to break mirror. I do not know anything about Windows NT Server. I was curious about your problem and did a cursory search. The following links might provide some insight.

https://www.reddit.com/r/talesfromtechsu...oldschool/
https://www.experts-exchange.com/questio...blems.html

Try cloning one(or both) of the drives and booting it in a seperate system?
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#3
Typically when you see a mirror broken in disk admin means that one of the drives went bad. You're probably going to need to break it, then start checking to see if a drive is bad. You might even want to shut down the system and check things out with either the BIOS or run some disk utilities.
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Einstein said Everything is Relative.
Heisenberg said Everything is Uncertain.
Therefore, everything is relatively uncertain.
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#4
When I was in IT back at the turn of the century we had software mirroring on an NT4 server. The mirror broke. Needless to say it required wiping and reinstalling (which I got to do) to truly fix and we went to a hardware RAID controller with multiple drives to do it right. Fortunately 2k server came out shortly afterward and I upgraded it to that.

Not to be negative, but your fears are valid and you should tread lightly as NT4 was extremely buggy about software mirroring. I also admit that it's been almost 19 years since I last did this, so my absolute recollections on the subject are hazy.
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#5
Way back when at work we had a system (my development system) with hardware mirroring on an (Asus) motherboard. The discs were fine but when the motherboard failed we lost everything on the discs. A replacement motherboard of the exact same model did not help.

Looking back through my system event log it's been over a year and a half since mirroring was working. Oops.
"I may be old, but I'm not dead."
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#6
New power supply later, things are working again. I verified I could boot the system with either mirrored drive disconnected.

Thanks for the suggestions.
"I may be old, but I'm not dead."
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#7
That's 7 seven years of bad luck.
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#8
(04-21-2019, 03:46 AM)DeeBye Wrote: That's 7 seven years of bad luck.

Since it broke over a year and a half ago that's only 5 plus more.
"I may be old, but I'm not dead."
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#9
(04-21-2019, 03:46 AM)DeeBye Wrote: That's 7 seven years of bad luck.

Thanks for the chuckle.
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