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#11
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On Sat, 28 May 2005 13:11:39 -0400, "Peter"
wrote: I happen to have an old 98SE boot disk someone gave me to see inside NTFS partitions. Ald FDISK is on it. However, FDISK won't let me clear the Active bit once it is set. Sorry, you are probably right. I currently don't have a two disk system around me to check. With one disk FDISK is unable to clear active partition flag (it can make other partition active, but that is not what we want). I went ahead and tried it with 2 disks installed and it still acted braindead. So I abandoned it. Alternatively you can use DOS utility called findpart. http://www.partitionsupport.com/fpart442.zip Use "findpart tables" to get needed info. Then, "set findpart=edit" "findpart dno pcyl pno - id ......." all parameters explained in editpart util below: http://www.partitionsupport.com/epart42.zip If that is too difficult, you may use Knoppix 3.8.2 boot CD (free download) and PartED, Or make BartPE CD and use diskpart within. Someone recommended a nifty utility called MBRWiz. I used the DOS version because I did not want my main boot disk in the machine. It worked just fine - now Windows doesn't go schitz on me. Here's the procedu 0) I removed all references to the driver for that disk in Win2K with Add/Remove Hardware, View Hidden. 1) I partitioned/formatted the disk with from DOS Western Digital DataLifeguard, which unfortunately sets the Active bit (really braindead for a major HD manufacturer). 2) I used MBRWizD to clear the Active bit. 3) I made sure the Award BIOS knew the correct hard disk to boot from (Advanced BIOS features). After preparing the disk with WD DLG, the BIOS prefers to boot from it. 4) I started Win2K which installed the proper driver because the Active bit was clear. 5) I rebooted Win2K to establish the new disk. No problems with shutdown, no STOP 0x9F POWER_FAILURE, no double disk icons, no ZIP Drive icon. Windows is truly a stupid piece of **** not to be able to deal with 2 active HDs at the same time. I am running Win2K but my son is running XP Pro. Where do I find "diskpart" on his system? %windir%\system32\diskpart.exe I looked there in my Win2K installation, but it was not there. So I went to the support MS website and found the version for Win2K. Now all I need to do is figure out how to use it. I could not find a manual. Is the "boot disk" in Enermax, your primary disk (OS and data), that you want to backup/protect? Yes. It is my only disk. The second one is extra - in a removable bay. Why are you attaching that "old" disk to your life system? If you are talking about the removable disk, I am not attaching it to any life system. I am using it for scratch space. If you don't care about any data on that WD disk, you may delete partition (FDISKable), intead of trying to make it inactive. Then recreate it if neccessary. Create it where? Somehow the Active bit stays set even when I delete the partition. To get this to work properly, I have to create the partition and do the format with WD DLG. Then I have to clear the Active bit with MBRWizd. Then I have to tell the BIOS what disk to use for booting. From there everything behaves normally. -- Map of the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy http://home.houston.rr.com/rkba/vrwc.html If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you are reading it in English, thank an American soldier. |
#12
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On Sun, 29 May 2005 04:13:24 +1000, "Rod Speed"
wrote: Wot an absolutely brilliant way to design hardware, cant even use by far Look, **** for brains, nobody asked you to troll this thread. Your credibility around here has plummeted straight to Hell. Nobody in his or her right mind pays any attention to you. You are just a psycho as far as any reasonable person goes. PM8 does not work with the Enermax box present because the Enermax is doing low level disk activity as long as it is plugged in. PM8 can't handle that. PM* is a basic piece of ****. the most commonly used partitioning app around. I guess 50 million flies can't be wrong about ****. And dont bother to provide their own. The problem is putting 2 Active disks in Windows. The fact that PM8 can't deal with it is irrelevant. Once the Active bit is cleared, Win2K behaves properly. Bull****. Look, **** for brains, nobody asked you to troll this thread. Your credibility around here has plummeted straight to Hell. Nobody in his or her right mind pays any attention to you. You are just a psycho as far as any reasonable person goes. Stupid assumption. Much more likely to be a ****ed driver. DUH. It is a Win2K driver from MS. It is ****ed over because Win2K can't deal with 2 Active disks at the same time. Once you clear the Active bit on the second drive, Win2K works just fine. Hence the reason I want to clear the Active bit. And it will be hilarious if that makes no difference. Well, **** for brains, it made all the difference in the world. Now it works. I get the last laugh, **** for brains. You need to go crawl under the rock you came from. -- Map of the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy http://home.houston.rr.com/rkba/vrwc.html If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you are reading it in English, thank an American soldier. |
#13
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On Sat, 28 May 2005 18:15:11 GMT, "old jon"
wrote: Hi Bob. Just come across this write up. Don`t know whether it helps you with you error or not Stop 0x9F messages can occur after installing faulty applications or drivers or system services. If a file is listed by name and you can associate it with an application, uninstall the application. For drivers, disable, remove, or roll back that driver to to determine if this resolves the error. If it does, contact the hardware manufacturer for a possible update. Using updated software is especially important for backup programs, multimedia applications, antivirus scanners, and CD mastering tools. ..J Thanks for the heads up, but I found those instructions on MS KB. I tried some of it but that was not the problem. The problem is that Win2K sees two HDs with Active bits set so it has to decide some kind of power down scheme, and with 2 boot disks it panics. The problems I encountered were solely caused by 2 Active drives. Once I cleared the Active bit all the problems went away. This may be worth knowing for those who do a clone on a second HD and then put it in using a removable bay to retrieve parts of the disk. Acronis sets the Active bit so the clone will be bootable. -- Map of the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy http://home.houston.rr.com/rkba/vrwc.html If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you are reading it in English, thank an American soldier. |
#14
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I found diskpart for Win2K and installed it. How do I use it to clear
the Active bit? I couldn't find any manual anywhere. I am afraid that option won't work in Win2K version of Diskpart. Use WinXP Diskpart ver.5.1.3565; there is an INACTIVE command. |
#15
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Is the "boot disk" in Enermax, your primary disk (OS and data),
that you want to backup/protect? Yes. It is my only disk. The second one is extra - in a removable bay. Why are you attaching that "old" disk to your life system? If you are talking about the removable disk, I am not attaching it to any life system. I am using it for scratch space. "scratch space"? Which disk are you booting from if you want to use that "scratch space" disk? If you don't care about any data on that WD disk, you may delete partition (FDISKable), intead of trying to make it inactive. Then recreate it if neccessary. Create it where? Boot Win98SE, use FDISK to work with WD drive. Somehow the Active bit stays set even when I delete the partition. That is weird. How many disks do you have in your system when you perform FDISK partition remove for WD? To get this to work properly, I have to create the partition and do the format with WD DLG. Then I have to clear the Active bit with MBRWizd. Then I have to tell the BIOS what disk to use for booting. From there everything behaves normally. Quite elaborate process. Why do you have to use WD DLG to create partition and format WD disk? What kind of disk is that? |
#16
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Bob wrote in message ... Peter wrote I happen to have an old 98SE boot disk someone gave me to see inside NTFS partitions. Ald FDISK is on it. However, FDISK won't let me clear the Active bit once it is set. Sorry, you are probably right. I currently don't have a two disk system around me to check. With one disk FDISK is unable to clear active partition flag (it can make other partition active, but that is not what we want). I went ahead and tried it with 2 disks installed and it still acted braindead. So I abandoned it. Alternatively you can use DOS utility called findpart. http://www.partitionsupport.com/fpart442.zip Use "findpart tables" to get needed info. Then, "set findpart=edit" "findpart dno pcyl pno - id ......." all parameters explained in editpart util below: http://www.partitionsupport.com/epart42.zip If that is too difficult, you may use Knoppix 3.8.2 boot CD (free download) and PartED, Or make BartPE CD and use diskpart within. Someone recommended a nifty utility called MBRWiz. I used the DOS version because I did not want my main boot disk in the machine. It worked just fine - now Windows doesn't go schitz on me. Here's the procedu 0) I removed all references to the driver for that disk in Win2K with Add/Remove Hardware, View Hidden. 1) I partitioned/formatted the disk with from DOS Western Digital DataLifeguard, which unfortunately sets the Active bit (really braindead for a major HD manufacturer). Stupid to continue to use it then when 2K can do what you want. 2) I used MBRWizD to clear the Active bit. 3) I made sure the Award BIOS knew the correct hard disk to boot from (Advanced BIOS features). After preparing the disk with WD DLG, the BIOS prefers to boot from it. Bull****. 4) I started Win2K which installed the proper driver because the Active bit was clear. There arent different drivers that depend on the active bit. 5) I rebooted Win2K to establish the new disk. No problems with shutdown, no STOP 0x9F POWER_FAILURE, no double disk icons, no ZIP Drive icon. That last stuff indicated you actually had a mangled 2K config that was the actual problem. Nothing to do with the active bit at all. Windows is truly a stupid piece of **** not to be able to deal with 2 active HDs at the same time. Corse it can, I do it all the time, mainly because its the simplest way to handle a main boot drive failure, just select the other drive in the bios to boot from. The only odd effect I have seen with one system that turned out to be an intermittent short to case with the motherboard which sometimes made the main boot drive invisible to the bios is that the bios would then automatically boot the other active hard drive without even any warning and you'd get heaps of alarms going off in Outlook because it hadnt been booted for quite a while. I am running Win2K but my son is running XP Pro. Where do I find "diskpart" on his system? %windir%\system32\diskpart.exe I looked there in my Win2K installation, but it was not there. So I went to the support MS website and found the version for Win2K. Now all I need to do is figure out how to use it. I could not find a manual. Cant have looked very hard. Is the "boot disk" in Enermax, your primary disk (OS and data), that you want to backup/protect? Yes. It is my only disk. The second one is extra - in a removable bay. Why are you attaching that "old" disk to your life system? If you are talking about the removable disk, I am not attaching it to any life system. I am using it for scratch space. If you don't care about any data on that WD disk, you may delete partition (FDISKable), intead of trying to make it inactive. Then recreate it if neccessary. Create it where? Somehow the Active bit stays set even when I delete the partition. Corse it cant. Its the PARTITION thats marked active, not the physical drive. To get this to work properly, I have to create the partition and do the format with WD DLG. Nope. 2K can partition and format a drive. Then I have to clear the Active bit with MBRWizd. Nope, 2K can handle more than one drive with an active partition on it fine. Then I have to tell the BIOS what disk to use for booting. From there everything behaves normally. Just one way of getting that result. A very crude and kludgy way. |
#17
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Bob wrote in message ... Rod Speed wrote Bob wrote in message I can't use Partition Magic 8.0 because it brainfarts (as usual) when it comes across something different from the simplest imaginable configuration. Although the Enermax disk is not in play, the hardware apparently presents some kind of profile to Partition Magic which freaks it out. Wot an absolutely brilliant way to design hardware, Look, **** for brains, nobody asked you to troll this thread. Your credibility around here has plummeted straight to Hell. Nobody in his or her right mind pays any attention to you. You are just a psycho as far as any reasonable person goes. Ad hominem and flagrant hypocrisy noted. Yet again. PM8 does not work with the Enermax box present because the Enermax is doing low level disk activity as long as it is plugged in. Just goes to show how terminally stupid that approach is then doesnt it ? And you're wrong, any RAID system does that too, and PM8 handles that fine. PM8 can't handle that. PM* is a basic piece of ****. How odd that it can handle RAID systems fine. cant even use by far the most commonly used partitioning app around. I guess 50 million flies can't be wrong about ****. Even you should be able to do better than that pathetic excuse for ****. And dont bother to provide their own. The problem is putting 2 Active disks in Windows. Nope, that works fine. The fact that PM8 can't deal with it is irrelevant. Once the Active bit is cleared, Win2K behaves properly. You didnt JUST reset the active bit on one of the drives. I can't get Windows to format it correctly because it too blows its brains when it had to deal with two Active disks. Bull****. Look, **** for brains, nobody asked you to troll this thread. Your credibility around here has plummeted straight to Hell. Nobody in his or her right mind pays any attention to you. You are just a psycho as far as any reasonable person goes. Ad hominem and flagrant hypocrisy noted. Yet again. I get a bad driver error in the form of a STOP 0x9F POWER_FAILURE error when I shut down. The MS KB says that's caused by a bad driver. I can only assume that Win2K has made a bad decision about configuring the driver for that second disk because it is Active. Stupid assumption. Much more likely to be a ****ed driver. DUH. It is a Win2K driver from MS. You dont even know that when you clearly didnt bother to mention the ZIP drive detail initially. It is ****ed over because Win2K can't deal with 2 Active disks at the same time. Wrong. As always. Once you clear the Active bit on the second drive, Win2K works just fine. You didnt JUST reset the active bit on one of the drives. Hence the reason I want to clear the Active bit. And it will be hilarious if that makes no difference. Well, **** for brains, it made all the difference in the world. Now it works. You didnt JUST reset the active bit on one of the drives. I get the last laugh, Only in your pathetic little drug crazed redneck fantasyland. **** for brains. You need to go crawl under the rock you came from. Ad hominem and flagrant hypocrisy noted. Yet again. |
#18
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Bob wrote in message ... old jon wrote Hi Bob. Just come across this write up. Don`t know whether it helps you with you error or not Stop 0x9F messages can occur after installing faulty applications or drivers or system services. If a file is listed by name and you can associate it with an application, uninstall the application. For drivers, disable, remove, or roll back that driver to to determine if this resolves the error. If it does, contact the hardware manufacturer for a possible update. Using updated software is especially important for backup programs, multimedia applications, antivirus scanners, and CD mastering tools. ..J Thanks for the heads up, but I found those instructions on MS KB. I tried some of it Not what matters until later. but that was not the problem. Wrong again. The problem is that Win2K sees two HDs with Active bits set so it has to decide some kind of power down scheme, and with 2 boot disks it panics. Wrong. 2K works fine with two drives with active bits set. The problems I encountered were solely caused by 2 Active drives. You dont know that. Once I cleared the Active bit all the problems went away. You didnt JUST reset one of the active bits. You actually DELETED THE DRIVERS FOR ONE OF THE DRIVES. This may be worth knowing for those who do a clone on a second HD and then put it in using a removable bay to retrieve parts of the disk. Nope, that works fine, 2K doesnt care about the two drives with the active bit set, which Acronis obviously realises even if you dont. Acronis sets the Active bit so the clone will be bootable. And it works fine that way. And True Image has another option that allows the preparation of a new drive that you dont want to be bootable too. And it doesnt set the active bit with the partitions you put on that drive either. |
#19
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On Sat, 28 May 2005 15:44:52 -0400, "Peter"
wrote: "scratch space"? Which disk are you booting from if you want to use that "scratch space" disk? I am booting from the Enermax disk. The one that was giving me trouble because the Active bit was set is in a Kingwin KF-23 removable bay. Boot Win98SE, use FDISK to work with WD drive. I have a solution now with MBR Wizard. Somehow the Active bit stays set even when I delete the partition. That is weird. How many disks do you have in your system when you perform FDISK partition remove for WD? Only that disk. To get this to work properly, I have to create the partition and do the format with WD DLG. Then I have to clear the Active bit with MBRWizd. Then I have to tell the BIOS what disk to use for booting. From there everything behaves normally. Quite elaborate process. Not really. I load DLG to do the partition/format. That's actually faster than loading PM8. I then load MBRWizd. You always have to check the BIOS if you have two disks or more. Most people don't because the BIOS has chosen their real boot disk. But somehow my BIOS picks the newly partitioned/formatted disk. Once I set the BIOS up properly I never have to fool with it until I present a new partitioned/formatted disk. Since I do not have all that many disks to play with, that will be very rare. Why do you have to use WD DLG to create partition and format WD disk? I can't get Windows to do it properly if the Active bit is set. PM8 has a problem with the Enermax sometimes. It's too flaky to rely on. With DLG I can get the job done with no muss, no fuss. I just have to clear the Active bit which entails a simple additional step. What kind of disk is that? Caviar, circa year 2000 era. -- Map of the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy http://home.houston.rr.com/rkba/vrwc.html If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you are reading it in English, thank an American soldier. |
#20
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On Sun, 29 May 2005 06:30:15 +1000, "Rod Speed"
wrote: Stupid to continue to use it then when 2K can do what you want. You are the stupid one. 2K can't do what I want. It may do what you want, but then you are too stupid to realize that 2K or XP is not really doing what you think you want. After preparing the disk with WD DLG, the BIOS prefers to boot from it. Bull****. You are the one who is full of bull****. I know what my BIOS says. It says that it wants to boot from the disk I just partitioned/formatted. There arent different drivers that depend on the active bit. You don't know what you are talking about. That last stuff indicated you actually had a mangled 2K config that was the actual problem. Nothing to do with the active bit at all. As always you are again full of crap. I fixed the problem by clearing the Active bit. Windows attached the proper driver and all is working as expected. Corse it can, I do it all the time, mainly because its the simplest way to handle a main boot drive failure, just select the other drive in the bios to boot from. You do stupid things all the time so I would not pay any attention much less give any credence to your stupid ways of dealing with computer problems. The only odd effect I have seen with one system that turned out to be an intermittent short to case with the motherboard You are over the top. Don't be surprised if I ignore any posts from you. I don't have time to deal with someone who is obviously suffering from a psychosis. -- Map of the Vast Right Wing Conspiracy http://home.houston.rr.com/rkba/vrwc.html If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you are reading it in English, thank an American soldier. |
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