HOW TO: Establish and Boot to GPT Mirrors on 64-Bit Windows (814070)
The information in this article applies to:
- Microsoft Windows Server 2003, 64-Bit Datacenter Edition
- Microsoft Windows Server 2003, 64-Bit Enterprise Edition
SUMMARYThis step-by-step article describes how to successfully set up dynamic boot partition mirroring on GUID Partition Table
(GPT) disks. Unlike Master Boot Record (MBR) mirrors on 32-bit Windows, there
are more steps to successfully create and boot to mirrored boot volumes
on GPT disks. This article also describes how to recover after a primary disk
failure if the shadow disk did not already have an EFI partition established. The disk must have an EFI partition
to boot. You must have the built-in Diskpart.exe and Bootcfg.exe
utilities to create bootable mirror volumes on GPT disks. You can do some of
these steps with the Disk Management console, but others you can do
only with the built-in Diskpart.exe utility. For consistency
and ease of use, this article uses the Diskpart.exe utility to
perform the steps. For help with any the Diskpart.exe commands,
start Diskmgmt.msc, and then open the help topics on the Help menu. The
steps are performed with real examples. The steps show the expected results
returned from each command. Disk 0 is the primary system and boot drive. Disk 1 is the shadow drive. back to the topPrepare the Shadow Drive for MirroringBefore you set up boot volume mirroring, it is a good idea
have another GPT disk in the computer that contains an Extensible Firmware
Interface (EFI) partition. The EFI partition contains the system files used to
boot the operating system. If the primary system drive (disk-0) fails, you can use the
EFI partition on the shadow drive (disk-1) to boot. This step
creates and prepares new EFI and Microsoft Reserved (MSR) partitions on the
shadow drive. You can use only the Diskpart.exe utility to create the required
EFI and MSR partitions. You cannot use the Disk Management console to create or
mirror EFI or MSR partitions. Before you start, make sure that you have another BASIC disk with all unallocated free space of equal or greater
capacity than the primary disks system and boot partitions. If you already
converted the spare drive to dynamic, revert it back to basic before
you follow these steps.
- At a command prompt, run the Diskpart.exe utility.
This starts the diskpart console. After it is initialized, DISKPART>
is displayed. It waits for your input commands. - Select the disk that you want to be the shadow drive, and then
convert the drive to GPT. In this example, disk 1 is used for the mirror
(shadow) drive.
Note: The disk that you select must not contain any data partitions and must be a raw basic disk with only unallocated space of equal or greater
capacity than the primary system disk.
Note: The following are the commands that you type at the command prompt. The commands are formatted in bold, and comments about the command, or the contents of the screen, are formatted in plain text. - Select partition 1 on disk 1, then delete it - you must
use the override command to delete the Microsoft Reserved (MSR) partition. You
will re-create a new MSR partition after you create the required EFI partition.
- DISKPART> Select partition 1
Partition 1 is now the selected
partition.
- DISKPART> Delete partition override
Diskpart successfully deleted the selected
partition.
- Select disk-0, and then list the partitions on disk-0. With the output of the list command, create new EFI and MSR partitions on disk 1 that are
the same sizes as those on disk 0.
- DISKPART> Select disk 0
Disk 0 is now the selected disk.
- DISKPART> List partition
Partition ### Type Size Offset
------------- ---------------- ------- -------
Partition 1 System 204 MB 32 KB <---- EFI PARTITION
Partition 2 Primary 4996 MB 204 MB
Partition 3 Reserved 32 MB 9 GB <---- MSR PARTITION
- DISKPART> select disk 1
Disk 1 is now the selected disk.
- DISKPART> create partition efi size=204
Diskpart succeeded in creating the specified
partition.
- DISKPART> create partition msr size=32
Diskpart succeeded in creating the specified
partition.
- DISKPART> list partition
Partition ### Type Size Offset
------------- ---------------- ------- -------
Partition 1 System 204 MB 17 KB <---- NEW EFI PARTITION ON SHADOW
*Partition 2 Reserved 32 MB 204 MB <---- NEW MSR PARTITION ON SHADOW
- Select the EFI partition on the shadow drive, and then assign a
letter to the EFI partition so it can be formatted. In this example, the drive
letter S is assigned to the shadow EFI partition. You can use any
available drive letter for this step.
- DISKPART> Select disk 1
Disk 1 is now the selected disk.
- DISKPART> Select partition 1
Partition 1 is now the selected
partition.
- DISKPART> Assign letter=S
Diskpart successfully assigned the drive letter or mount
point.
- Open a new command prompt, and then use the format utility to
format the EFI partition (S:) with the FAT file system. You must do this so that
you can copy the system files from the primary EFI partition to this new EFI
partition. Do not format with NTFS. The system cannot boot from an EFI
partition unless it is formatted with the FAT file system.
- C:\> format s: /fs:fat /q /y
The type of the file system is RAW.
The new file system is FAT.
QuickFormatting 204M
Initializing the File Allocation Table (FAT)...
Format complete.
213,680,128 bytes total disk space.
213,680,128 bytes available on disk.
4,096 bytes in each allocation unit.
52,168 allocation units available on disk.
16 bits in each FAT entry.
Volume Serial Number is EA34-03C7
- Press ALT+TAB to return to the diskpart command window.
Select the EFI partition on the primary drive (disk-0), and then assign a drive
letter to that EFI partition. In this example, the drive letter P is assigned to the primary EFI partition on disk-0. You can use any available
drive letter for this step.
- DISKPART> Select disk 0
Disk 0 is now the selected disk.
- DISKPART> Select partition 1
Partition 1 is now the selected
partition.
- DISKPART> Assign letter=P
Diskpart successfully assigned the drive letter or mount
point.
- Press ALT+TAB again to return to the other command prompt.
Use the xcopy command to copy the system files from the primary EFI partition (P:)
to the Shadow EFI partition (S:). You must do this to make sure that the shadow
drive can boot the system if disk-0 fails. Make sure that you use
the correct drive letters if you used different letters for your EFI
partitions.
- C:\> xcopy p:\*.* s: /s
/h
p:\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\Boot0003 p:\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
p:\EFI\Microsoft\EFIDrivers\fpswa.efi p:\MSUtil\diskpart.efi
p:\MSUtil\fdisk.efi p:\MSUtil\format.efi p:\MSUtil\nvrboot.efi
7 File(s) copied
- Remove the drive letters assigned to both EFI partitions.
This step is optional, because after a reboot they will not be re-assigned.
- DISKPART> Select volume P
Volume P is the selected volume.
- DISKPART> Remove
Diskpart successfully removed the drive letter or mount
point.
- Repeat the steps for the S volume.
back to the topConvert the Primary and Shadow Drives to
DynamicBefore you can establish a mirror, both the primary (source)
drive (Disk-0) and the shadow (destination) drive (Disk-1) must be converted to
Dynamic. After the disks are Dynamic (after a reboot), you can then
establish the mirror. You can do this step with either the Disk
Management console or the Diskpart.exe utility. - With Diskpart.exe, select the disk that you want to convert to
dynamic, and then convert it to dynamic. Perform this on both the shadow and
primary GPT disks. Start with the shadow disk.
- DISKPART> Select disk 1
Disk 1 is now the selected disk
- DISKPART> Convert dynamic
Diskpart successfully converted the selected disk to
Dynamic format.
- DISKPART> Select disk 0
Disk 0 is now the selected disk
- DISKPART> Convert dynamic
You must reboot your computer to complete this
operation.
- DISKPART> Exit
Leaving Diskpart...
- Shut down and restart your computer to complete the conversion
of the system drive (disk-0) to dynamic. This may require two reboots.
back to the topEstablish a Mirror from the Boot Drive to the Shadow
DriveAfter both the primary (disk-0) and shadow (disk-1) drives
are dynamic, you can then establish the mirror of the boot volume to the shadow
drive. You can do this step with either the Disk management console or
the Diskpart.exe utility.
- With Diskpart.exe, select the boot volume (C:), and then mirror
the volume to the shadow disk (disk-1).
- DISKPART> Select volume C
Volume 1 is the selected volume.
- DISKPART> add disk=1
Diskpart succeeded in adding a mirror to the
volume.
- Wait for the volume synchronization to complete, and then quit
Diskpart.
back to the topUse Bootcfg.exe to Add New EFI Partition Boot Entries
to NVRAMNow that you have successfully established the boot mirror, a
new boot entry was automatically added to NVRAM so that you can boot to the shadow
drive. This new entry is displayed as "Boot Mirror C: - secondary plex" on the
boot menu. If you select it, it will boot into the operating system on the shadow
drive. However, if something were to happen to any of the system files or the
EFI partition itself on disk-0 or if disk-0 failed completely, you would
have to boot from the EFI partition on disk-1. Before this will work, you have to add boot entries into NVRAM with the Bootcfg.exe utility.
- At a command prompt, run the Bootcfg.exe utility to
display the current boot entries. Note that you have one boot entry for the main
operating system (boot entry id:1) , and one boot entry for the Mirror (shadow)
drive (boot entry id:5).
- C:> bootcfg
Boot Options
------------
Timeout: 30
Default: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDO
CurrentBootEntryID: 5
Boot Entries
------------
Boot entry ID: 1
OS Friendly Name: Windows 2003 Server, Enterprise
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume1\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDOWS
Boot entry ID: 2
OS Friendly Name: LS120
Boot entry ID: 3
OS Friendly Name: CDROM
Boot entry ID: 4
OS Friendly Name: EFI Shell
Boot entry ID: 5
OS Friendly Name: Boot Mirror C: - secondary plex
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume1\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDOWS
- Before you can add the new entries for the EFI partition and
boot partition on the shadow drive to NVRAM, you have to list the existing
partitions on disk-0 so that you can extract partition GUID information about the
current EFI partition. Use the bootcfg /list command against disk-0 to display all
the partitions:
- C:\> bootcfg /list 0
Partition table info for Disk: 0
---------------------------------
Partition No: 1
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 32,256
Partition length: 213,825,024
Partition GUID: {68d298c0-1b6a-01c1-507b-9e5f8078f531}
GUID type: {c12a7328-f81f-11d2-ba4b-00a0c93ec93b}
Partition name: EFI system partition
Partition No: 2
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 213,857,280
Partition length: 5,142,056,960
Partition GUID: {68d298c0-1b6a-01c1-f1b3-12714f758821}
GUID type: {af9b60a0-1431-4f62-bc68-3311714a69ad}
Partition name: LDM data partition
Partition No: 3
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 9,153,031,680
Partition length: 1,048,576
Partition GUID: {73e47280-0d38-11d7-b47f-806e6f6e6963}
GUID type: {5808c8aa-7e8f-42e0-85d2-e1e90434cfb3}
Partition name: LDM metadata partition
Partition No: 4
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 9,154,080,256
Partition length: 32,505,856
Partition GUID: {1ca4672d-a37c-4e12-bacb-c5ae97924965}
GUID type: {e3c9e316-0b5c-4db8-817d-f92df00215ae}
Partition name: Microsoft reserved partition
- Make a note of the EFI partition GUID.
{________-____-____-____-____________} This will be used as the SOURCE GUID in
a later command.
In this example the value is:
{68d298c0-1b6a-01c1-507b-9e5f8078f531} and will be used in a later
command.
- Use the bootcfg /list command against disk-1 to display all of
its partitions:
- C:\> bootcfg /list 1
Partition table info for Disk: 1
---------------------------------
Partition No: 1
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 17,408
Partition length: 213,909,504
Partition GUID: {476688c5-8ebf-47d2-80e7-cf9d065edb81}
GUID type: {c12a7328-f81f-11d2-ba4b-00a0c93ec93b}
Partition name: EFI system partition
Partition No: 2
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 213,926,912
Partition length: 1,048,576
Partition GUID: {b72d10f6-e94e-4a4d-bb8e-4da985cc1679}
GUID type: {5808c8aa-7e8f-42e0-85d2-e1e90434cfb3}
Partition name: LDM metadata partition
Partition No: 3
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 214,975,488
Partition length: 32,505,856
Partition GUID: {824858f3-b8d5-4b4d-a3c7-18aac4442b7e}
GUID type: {e3c9e316-0b5c-4db8-817d-f92df00215ae}
Partition name: Microsoft reserved partition
Partition No: 4
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 247,481,344
Partition length: 5,142,056,960
Partition GUID: {f3d11286-2582-4d76-889c-b82c346be44e}
GUID type: {af9b60a0-1431-4f62-bc68-3311714a69ad}
Partition name: LDM data partition
- Make a note of the EFI partition GUID.
{________-____-____-____-____________} This will be used as the TARGET GUID in
a later command.
In this example the value is:
{476688c5-8ebf-47d2-80e7-cf9d065edb81} and will be used in a later
command.
- Now you have the SOURCE and TARGET EFI GUID values that you have to have to
clone the boot entries in NVRAM. The new entries use the new EFI partition
GUID on the shadow drive to boot the system if disk-0 fails in any
way. Use the bootcfg /clone command to add new NVRAM boot entries with your
source and target GUID values recorded in steps 2 and 3.
- To see the new Cloned entries added to NVRAM, use the
bootcfg command and notice you now have seven entries instead of five. The
bottom two entries are the cloned entries and will use the EFI partition on the
shadow drive (disk-1) to boot.
- C:\>bootcfg
Boot Options
------------
Timeout: 30
Default: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDOWS
CurrentBootEntryID: 5
Boot Entries
------------
Boot entry ID: 1
OS Friendly Name: Windows 2003 Server, Enterprise
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume1\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDOWS
Boot entry ID: 2
OS Friendly Name: LS120
Boot entry ID: 3
OS Friendly Name: CDROM
Boot entry ID: 4
OS Friendly Name: EFI Shell
Boot entry ID: 5
OS Friendly Name: Boot Mirror C: - secondary plex
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume1\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDOWS
Boot entry ID: 6
OS Friendly Name: Windows 2003 Server, Enterprise Cloned_Entry
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume3\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDOWS
Boot entry ID: 7
OS Friendly Name: Boot Mirror C: - secondary plex Cloned_Entry
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume3\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDOWS
back to the topTest-Boot the Shadow Drive with the New Boot
EntriesAfter you have created the new boot entries in NVRAM, test the entries to make sure that the system can boot to the shadow
drive if disk-0 fails. - Perform a graceful shutdown and restart of
Windows.
- On the boot menu, select the boot entry named Boot Mirror
C: - secondary plex Cloned_Entry to boot to the shadow drive. The EFI
partition on the shadow drive will be used to boot the Windows operating
system.
Although you do not have to, you can also turn off the computer,
remove disk-0, and then redo the test to make sure that the system will be bootable
if the original system disk really fails and is removed. back to the topRecover a Shadow Boot Drive with Missing or Damaged EFI
PartitionIf the original Windows operating system was software
mirrored to a Dynamic GPT disk that did not contain an EFI partition, or the EFI
partition becomes damaged, or if the primary system disk (disk-0) fails, you
may receive the following error message when you try to boot to the shadow
disk: LOADING.: Boot Mirror C: - Secondary plex
Load of Boot Mirror c: - secondary plex failed: Not Found
Paused - press any key to continue.
You must now use the following procedure to recover
the original operating system (shadow) drive. This following steps show you the whole process. The process includes replacing the failed disk-0, re-installing Windows on
the new replacement disk, which creates a new EFI system partition, and then adding
new boot entries into NVRAM so that you can boot back into the original operating
system on the shadow disk-1. - Remove the failed system drive (disk-0) and replace it with
a good disk. See your hardware manuals for the correct way to replace the
failed disk. The replacement disk does not have to be partitioned or formatted. It can be a brand new disk.
- Insert the Windows 2003 Server installation CD into the
computer's CD-ROM drive, then power on the system.
- When the system boot options menu is displayed, select to
boot from CD-ROM. When you are prompted to press any key to boot from the CD, press any
key.
This starts Windows 2003 Server setup. - On the Welcome to Windows Setup screen, press ENTER to
install and allow Setup to automatically create the new system partition.
You must do this to boot and allow Setup to continue. - After the new EFI and MSR partitions are created, select
the free space on disk-0 and create a new partition large enough to install
Windows and hold a page file.
- Select the newly created partition to install Windows on,
and then select the format option that you want to format the partition. Setup
continues. Answer all appropriate questions that you are prompted with, and then let Setup finish.
- After Setup is complete, log on the console as
Administrator.
- At a command prompt, run the bootcfg command to display the
current boot menu items from NVRAM.
Boot Options
------------
Timeout: 5
Default: \Device\HarddiskVolume3\WINDOWS
CurrentBootEntryID: 1
Boot Entries
------------
Boot entry ID: 1
OS Friendly Name: Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Enterprise Edition
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume1\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume3\WINDOWS
Boot entry ID: 2
OS Friendly Name: Windows Server 2003, Enterprise Edition
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: (null)
OsFilePath: (null)
Boot entry ID: 3
OS Friendly Name: LS120
Boot entry ID: 4
OS Friendly Name: CDROM
Boot entry ID: 5
OS Friendly Name: EFI Shell
Boot entry ID: 6
OS Friendly Name: Boot Mirror C: - secondary plex
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: (null)
OsFilePath: (null)
- Use the bootcfg /list command to display all of the partitions
on the shadow disk (disk-1). Locate the original Windows boot partition. It has the name of "LDM data partition" and has a partition length the same size as the original boot partition.
In this example, the boot
partition is entry No: 3 with the GUID of
{9aee294a-fa7d-4d4a-8a47-51a1dd1f9867}
Partition table info for Disk: 1
---------------------------------
Partition No: 1
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 17,408
Partition length: 1,048,576
Partition GUID: {646091f1-b826-47e8-a72c-f22072e9a769}
GUID type: {5808c8aa-7e8f-42e0-85d2-e1e90434cfb3}
Partition name: LDM metadata partition
Partition No: 2
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 1,065,984
Partition length: 32,505,856
Partition GUID: {afb1e6b9-d8a6-456d-8df1-31327f94f3fe}
GUID type: {e3c9e316-0b5c-4db8-817d-f92df00215ae}
Partition name: Microsoft reserved partition
Partition No: 3
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 33,571,840
Partition length: 3,142,056,960
Partition GUID: {9aee294a-fa7d-4d4a-8a47-51a1dd1f9867}
GUID type: {af9b60a0-1431-4f62-bc68-3311714a69ad}
Partition name: LDM data partition
Partition No: 4
Partition Style: GPT
Starting offset: 3,175,628,800
Partition length: 1,174,758,912
Partition GUID: {ab104fde-0782-4810-842e-0fb291e385ad}
GUID type: {af9b60a0-1431-4f62-bc68-3311714a69ad}
Partition name: LDM data partition
- Use the bootcfg /mirror command to add a boot entry into NVRAM
for the shadow disks boot partition and give it a meaningful description. Use
the Partition GUID from the boot partition extracted earlier.
- C:\>bootcfg /mirror /add {9aee294a-fa7d-4d4a-8a47-51a1dd1f9867} /D "Original Shadow drive"
SUCCESS: The mirrored boot entry has been
added.
- Use bootcfg to display the boot menu items again. Notice
the new entry was added to the bottom of the list. You can now use this entry to boot to the original Windows operating system.
- C:\>bootcfg
Boot Options
------------
Timeout: 5
Default: \Device\HarddiskVolume3\WINDOWS
CurrentBootEntryID: 1
Boot Entries
------------
Boot entry ID: 1
OS Friendly Name: Microsoft Windows Server 2003, Enterprise Edition
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume1\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume3\WINDOWS
Boot entry ID: 2
OS Friendly Name: Windows Server 2003, Enterprise Edition
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: (null)
OsFilePath: (null)
Boot entry ID: 3
OS Friendly Name: LS120
Boot entry ID: 4
OS Friendly Name: CDROM
Boot entry ID: 5
OS Friendly Name: EFI Shell
Boot entry ID: 6
OS Friendly Name: Boot Mirror C: - secondary plex
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: (null)
OsFilePath: (null)
Boot entry ID: 7
OS Friendly Name: Original Shadow drive
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume1\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: (null)
- Shut down the computer, and then restart it. Select the boot menu item
Original Shadow Drive to boot into the original operating system. This
brings the server back into production. To fix the mirroring so that you can use the
new disk-0 as your primary operating system drive and again be in a fault
tolerant environment, continue with the following steps.
back to the topRe-Establish the Primary Boot Drive MirrorWhile booted into the shadow drive (disk-1), you must
"remove" the broken mirror, and then delete the missing disk. You can do this with either the Disk Management console or the Diskpart.exe
utility. NOTE: If there were additional volumes on the original failed dynamic
disk-0, they must also be deleted before you are permitted to delete the
missing disk. - With Diskpart.exe, list the volumes, and then make a note of the
volume number (Volume #) of the failed mirror. Select the mirror volume (volume
#), and then view the details to see what missing disk (m#) you need to break the
mirror from. In this example, you are working with volume 0 on missing disk m0.
- DISKPART> list volume
Volume ### Ltr Label Fs Type Size Status Info
---------- --- ----------- ----- ---------- ------- --------- --------
Volume 0 C PRIMARY NTFS Mirror 2996 MB Failed Rd Boot
Volume 1 D CD-ROM 0 B Healthy
Volume 2 Partition 2996 MB Healthy
Volume 3 Partition 102 MB Healthy System
- DISKPART> select volume 0
Volume 0 is the selected volume.
- DISKPART> detail volume
Disk ### Status Size Free Dyn Gpt
-------- ---------- ------- ------- --- ---
Disk M0 Missing 2996 MB 0 B *
Disk 1 Online 4149 MB 1120 MB * *
- Break the mirror by specifying the missing disk (m0), and
then use the "no keep" option to remove the plex (partition) from the missing disk.
List the volumes to make sure the mirror is gone and the volume is now listed as a
simple volume.
- DISKPART> break disk=m0 nokeep
The service did not update the bootfile.
Diskpart successfully broke the mirror volume.
- DISKPART> list volume
Volume ### Ltr Label Fs Type Size Status Info
---------- --- ----------- ----- ---------- ------- --------- -------
Volume 0 C PRIMARY NTFS Simple 2996 MB Healthy Boot
Volume 1 D CD-ROM 0 B Healthy
Volume 2 Partition 2996 MB Healthy
Volume 3 Partition 102 MB Healthy System
- Select the missing disk (m0), and then delete it.
- DISKPART> select disk m0
Disk M0 is now the selected disk.
- DISKPART> delete disk
Diskpart successfully deleted the missing
disk.
- Delete the new Windows Server operating system partition on
disk-0, because it is no longer required. This makes room to re-mirror back to
disk-0.
NOTE: This step is optional if you have sufficient free space on disk-0 to
re-establish the mirror.
- Convert disk-0 to Dynamic, and then select the operating system
volume on disk-1 and re-establish the mirror back to disk-0. This puts the computer
back into a fault tolerant environment, and after the mirror is healthy you can boot back into disk-0 with the new boot option that was
automatically added to the NVRAM.
- Wait for the mirror status to become healthy. You can use
the list volume command repeatedly until the status changes from Rebuild to
Healthy. Quit the Diskpart utility.
- Use the bootcfg command to view the new boot option that was added
to the NVRAM. This new entry is named Boot Mirror C: - secondary plex and is most likely menu item ID 1. You can now clean up the original boot
entries for the original operating system and the original secondary plex with the
bootcfg /delete /ID # command.
- C:\>bootcfg
Boot Options
------------
Timeout: 30
Default: (null)
CurrentBootEntryID: 7
Boot Entries
------------
Boot entry ID: 1
OS Friendly Name: Boot Mirror C: - secondary plex
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume1\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: (null)
Boot entry ID: 2
OS Friendly Name: Windows Server 2003, Enterprise
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: (null)
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDOWS
Boot entry ID: 3
OS Friendly Name: LS120
Boot entry ID: 4
OS Friendly Name: CDROM
Boot entry ID: 5
OS Friendly Name: EFI Shell
Boot entry ID: 6
OS Friendly Name: Boot Mirror C: - Secondary Plex
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: (null)
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDOWS
Boot entry ID: 7
OS Friendly Name: original shadow system
OsLoadOptions: N/A
BootFilePath: \Device\HarddiskVolume1\EFI\Microsoft\WINNT50\ia64ldr.efi
OsFilePath: \Device\HarddiskDmVolumes\PhysicalDmVolumes\BlockVolume1\WINDOWS
- C:\>bootcfg /delete /ID 6
SUCCESS: Specified boot entry has been
deleted.
- C:\>bootcfg /delete /ID 2
SUCCESS: Specified boot entry has been
deleted.
- This concludes this procedure and the remaining boot
entries in the boot menu are all valid boot entries to boot to both the primary
and shadow drives.
back to the top
Modification Type: | Major | Last Reviewed: | 10/30/2003 |
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Keywords: | kbStorageMgmt kbHOWTOmaster KB814070 |
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