Troubleshooting

You receive a “Non-system disk” or “disk error” error message

Eject the diskette from the diskette drive, then press ENTER.

Make sure that your hard drive has an active partition. For more information, see “The master boot record is corrupted” on page 76.

Your server does not recognize an IDE drive

Make sure that the IDE connectors are enabled in the BIOS Setup utility. For more information, see “Using the BIOS Setup Utility” on page 55.

Reinstall the device driver. For more information, see Using Your Server Companion CD.

Use GWScan to test the hard drive. For more information, see “You need to troubleshoot an IDE hard drive” on page 76.

Open your server and make sure that the IDE cable is connected to both the system board IDE connector and the hard drive connector. For more information, see “Installing a hard drive” on page 35.

Your server does not recognize a SCSI drive

Make sure that the SCSI controller is enabled in the BIOS Setup utility.

Reinstall the device driver. For more information, see Using Your Server Companion CD.

Change the drive’s SCSI address to one that is not being used by your server. For more information about SCSI device configurations, see your drive’s documentation.

Run SCSI Verify in the SCSI BIOS. For more information about the SCSI BIOS, see the SCSI controller’s documentation.

Open your server and reseat the drive controller card. Also make sure that the controller card and power cables are connected to the drive. For more information, see “Installing PCI expansion cards” on page 40 or your controller card’s documentation.

Make sure that the power cable and SCSI cable are attached securely to the drive.

Make sure that the last device on the SCSI cable is correctly terminated. For more information about SCSI device configurations, see the device’s documentation.

Use a different SCSI cable.

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