A University VMWare vSphere ESX5 Accidentally Deleted Virtual Machine Data Recovery Case

Case:The school’s computer room managers mistakenly delete an important virtual machine when cleaning up storage.The virtual machine system is RHEL5, which is an academic system with a virtual machine size of 500GB.The customer’s on -site protection is quite well protected, and there is no destructive operation after deleting the virtual machine. Solution:The engineer analyzed that…

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Why is Drive Translation necessary?

image DOS and DOS based programs like Windows 3.x and Windows 95 cannot access drives over 1024 cylinders on their own, but require third party assistance to use large hard drives. SCSI drives handle this with drivers built in to the SCSI controller, so we will limit this discussion to ATA hard drives. There are several methods used to overcome the cylinder limitation, and all of them involve translation.

A translation scheme converts information from one form to another and back again. Think of it like this: If you go to a foreign country to conduct business and you don’t speak the language, you need a translator. The translator’s job is to convert information from one party into a language the other party can understand and vice versa. Without the services of a translator, the two parties have a limited exchange of information. A smile, a nod, and a mispronounced and grammatically incorrect “How are you?” is about all that is possible.

The types of translation support are as follows:

1. An ATA (IDE) host adapter with a BIOS that provides large drive support.

2. Third party software like EZ-Drive® and DiscWizard Starter Edition.

3. A motherboard BIOS that provides large drive support. Some of the terminology is as follows:

  • Logical Block Addressing (LBA)
  • Large
  • Extended Cylinder, Head, Sector (E-CHS)
  • Sector Translation
  • Sector or Track Mapping

These support features are the “language” translators that allow your operating system and hardware to speak two different “languages” and still interact successfully with one another.

All of the BIOS options, once installed, are transparent to the user. EZ-Drive and DiscWizard Starter Edition are not. In addition, there is one issue that both share — special procedures are needed to boot to a diskette when installing new software.

Dynamic Drive Overlay software like EZ-Drive and DiscWizard Starter Edition use similar techniques, at first glance, to overcome the 1024 cylinder limitation. Both programs load proprietary translation information on the boot hard drive that identifies which drive is using the program and gives the operating system access to the area of the drive over 1024 cylinders. Without this proprietary translation code loaded, the drive using EZ-Drive or DiscWizard Starter Edition is unrecognizable to the operating system. If the hard drive is using translating software, and you try to boot with an unmodified diskette in the floppy drive, the translating software does not get a chance to load, thereby rendering the hard drive unreadable. This is generally only a problem if the diskette is infected with a virus. Simply remove the diskette and reboot. The hard drive should boot normally.

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Controllers verified to provide visible RAID volumes greater than 4 TB

The list of controllers below has been verified to provide visible RAID volumes greater than 4 TB.

3Ware 9550SXWin 2003
3Ware 9690PLWin 2003
RHEL 5 U 2
Adaptec 1420SAWin 2003
Areca ARC-1220MLWin 2003
RHEL 5 U 1
HighPoint 2220Win 2003
HighPoint 3220Win 2003
Intel ICH8RWin Vista x86
Win Vista x64
Win XP x64
Intel ICH9RWin Vista x86
Win Vista x86
Win XP x64
Silicon Image SIL3124Win 2003
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Can I boot my computer from SCSI drive?

SCSI Drive Will my new SCSI drive boot my computer? or error message:

no ROM BIOS?

The drive will need to be partitioned and formatted for your computer’s operating system before it can be used as the boot drive. Follow the instructions in the operating system or computer manual for installing a new hard drive and loading the operating system.

SCSI boots from BIOS. Most SCSI controllers feature on-board ROM BIOS to controll the disk drive. Older SCSI controllers may use jumpers or a start up disk to access BIOS. Enable SCSI BIOS for the active partition, C:\, to be recognized. Using more than one SCSI controller? Choose only one to start up. Typically only one active partition is allowed each drive. If BIOS has support for removable disks as hard drives, choose:All Disks. Consult your SCSI controller or system guides.

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