Storage Spaces can't add drive to pool.

ziplock9000

New Member
Messages
11
When adding an initial drive to a storage pool I get the error "incorrect function"
System: Proliant ML110 G4, Windows 8 64-Bit, 4GB Ram
I have a 160GB drive installed on the motherboard's controller which hosts the OS
I've installed a single 2TB drive on a 2 Port PCI Express Internal SATA II Controller Card (JMB36x).
As soon as I create a pool using the 2TB drive I get the error "Incorrect Function" and the drive becomes RAW.
The drive id's are unique.
It's worth pointing out that the system without the new controller can only support 2TB max of SATA drives, but this is bypassed by the controller card I added?
Help is appreciated.

Get-PhysicalDisk | format-list FriendlyName, UniqueId, ObjectId, BusType

FriendlyName : PhysicalDisk0
UniqueId : 2039374232333633
ObjectId : {af665d5a-f225-11e2-be77-806e6f6e6963}
BusType : RAID

FriendlyName : PhysicalDisk1
UniqueId : IDE\DiskST3160812AS_______________________________3.AJL_\5&3dc7918&0&0.0.0:risa
ObjectId : {af665d5b-f225-11e2-be77-806e6f6e6963}
BusType : ATA



I'm also worried that the 2TB drive is showing up as RAID not SATA on the controller.
 
Last edited:

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8 64-Bit
Hm, this is the reverse of a problem that happened a few days ago, that guy found a solution that may relate to this - I'll try to find him and have him take a look at this thread. brb! Welcome to Windows 8 Forums btw.

OK I sent the guy a link to this post, hopefully he can give you something to try. I'm not familiar with using Storage Spaces that much, there are a few in here who are.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8 Pro with Media Center/Windows 7
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Asus M2N-MX SE Plus § DualCore AMD Athlon 64 X2, 2300 MHz (11.5 x 200) 4400+ § Corsair Value Select
    CPU
    AMD 4400+/4200+
    Motherboard
    Asus M2N-MX SE Plus/Asus A8M2N-LA (NodusM)
    Memory
    2 GB/3GB
    Graphics Card(s)
    GeForce 8400 GS/GeForce 210
    Sound Card
    nVIDIA GT218 - High Definition Audio Controller
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Hitachi 40" LCD HDTV
    Screen Resolution
    "1842 x 1036"
    Hard Drives
    WDC WD50 00AAKS-007AA SCSI Disk Device
    ST1000DL 002-9TT153 SCSI Disk Device
    WDC WD3200AAJB-00J3A0 ATA Device
    WDC WD32 WD-WCAPZ2942630 USB Device
    WD My Book 1140 USB Device
    PSU
    Works 550w
    Case
    MSI "M-Box"
    Cooling
    Water Cooled
    Keyboard
    Dell Keyboard
    Mouse
    Microsoft Intellimouse
    Internet Speed
    Cable Medium Speed
    Browser
    Chrome/IE 10
    Antivirus
    Eset NOD32 6.x/Win Defend
    Other Info
    Recently lost my Windows 8 on my main PC, had to go back to Windows 7.
Hm, this is the reverse of a problem that happened a few days ago, that guy found a solution that may relate to this - I'll try to find him and have him take a look at this thread. brb! Welcome to Windows 8 Forums btw.

OK I sent the guy a link to this post, hopefully he can give you something to try. I'm not familiar with using Storage Spaces that much, there are a few in here who are.

Any chance you can link to the thread that mentioned this? Thanks.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8 64-Bit
My prob wasn't really related to this but ill take a stab. Strange that you cannot create a span larger than 2tb. First off what is storages spaces? I use windows disk manager to create my spans. I can post a tutorial on how i do it if you want. You can combine any number of drives together so that you have only one drive. For instance i have two 2tb hdds, one 1tb hdd. I create the span so that it appears as if i have one 5tb hdd in my system. The drives must be unallocated to create the span and if one drive goes down they all fail. This is why i have a duplicate span setup in a local enclosure. Might seem like overkill to some but its the only way i feel safe. I dont trust mobo raid. Anyhow....

How many sata ports on ur mobo?
when u go into your bios are your ports set as ahci?
e.g. I have 8 sata ports on my mobo. 6 are controlled by an amd controller and 2 by a gigabyte controller.
whats your mobo model?
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8
    CPU
    8 core AMD 8150
    Motherboard
    Gigabyte GA-890-fxa-UD5
    Memory
    4 sticks of 4GB Gskill 1333
    Graphics Card(s)
    Radeon HD 5700
    Hard Drives
    60GB Crucial M4 ssd
    two 2TB green WD
    one 1TB WD
    one 640GB WD
    PSU
    Corsair 750
    Case
    Antec 1200V3
    Cooling
    Arctic Freezer Pro
Fyi my prob was unrelated to my span of disks. I had some strange rogue file on one of my hhd that prevented win8 from booting.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8
    CPU
    8 core AMD 8150
    Motherboard
    Gigabyte GA-890-fxa-UD5
    Memory
    4 sticks of 4GB Gskill 1333
    Graphics Card(s)
    Radeon HD 5700
    Hard Drives
    60GB Crucial M4 ssd
    two 2TB green WD
    one 1TB WD
    one 640GB WD
    PSU
    Corsair 750
    Case
    Antec 1200V3
    Cooling
    Arctic Freezer Pro
My prob wasn't really related to this but ill take a stab. Strange that you cannot create a span larger than 2tb. First off what is storages spaces? I use windows disk manager to create my spans. I can post a tutorial on how i do it if you want. You can combine any number of drives together so that you have only one drive. For instance i have two 2tb hdds, one 1tb hdd. I create the span so that it appears as if i have one 5tb hdd in my system. The drives must be unallocated to create the span and if one drive goes down they all fail. This is why i have a duplicate span setup in a local enclosure. Might seem like overkill to some but its the only way i feel safe. I dont trust mobo raid. Anyhow....

How many sata ports on ur mobo?
when u go into your bios are your ports set as ahci?
e.g. I have 8 sata ports on my mobo. 6 are controlled by an amd controller and 2 by a gigabyte controller.
whats your mobo model?

Storage spaces is the recent evolution of windows disk manager and in many ways it's replacement. It can't really cover it here as there are many articles on the internet about it.
As explained above, the drives are not on the mobo, but a second controller. The drive works fine until added to a storage pool.
Model numbers are in my post above.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8 64-Bit
Maybe one of the drives you want to pool has developed a read error. You can use GWscan to check it from outside of it's mounted state, you are just checking for read errors on the surface of the drive.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8 Pro with Media Center/Windows 7
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Asus M2N-MX SE Plus § DualCore AMD Athlon 64 X2, 2300 MHz (11.5 x 200) 4400+ § Corsair Value Select
    CPU
    AMD 4400+/4200+
    Motherboard
    Asus M2N-MX SE Plus/Asus A8M2N-LA (NodusM)
    Memory
    2 GB/3GB
    Graphics Card(s)
    GeForce 8400 GS/GeForce 210
    Sound Card
    nVIDIA GT218 - High Definition Audio Controller
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Hitachi 40" LCD HDTV
    Screen Resolution
    "1842 x 1036"
    Hard Drives
    WDC WD50 00AAKS-007AA SCSI Disk Device
    ST1000DL 002-9TT153 SCSI Disk Device
    WDC WD3200AAJB-00J3A0 ATA Device
    WDC WD32 WD-WCAPZ2942630 USB Device
    WD My Book 1140 USB Device
    PSU
    Works 550w
    Case
    MSI "M-Box"
    Cooling
    Water Cooled
    Keyboard
    Dell Keyboard
    Mouse
    Microsoft Intellimouse
    Internet Speed
    Cable Medium Speed
    Browser
    Chrome/IE 10
    Antivirus
    Eset NOD32 6.x/Win Defend
    Other Info
    Recently lost my Windows 8 on my main PC, had to go back to Windows 7.
Maybe one of the drives you want to pool has developed a read error. You can use GWscan to check it from outside of it's mounted state, you are just checking for read errors on the surface of the drive.
It worked fine as a stand alone simple drive before adding to a pool.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8 64-Bit
storage spaces seems like a dumbed down version of disk management. I've never used an add-in sata controller card. I wonder if it's a port multiplier problem on the card. I always just use the sata ports on my mobo. It has always been safe. I have upgraded BIOS', wiped the hard drive and installed windows 7 & 8 a bunch of times and even upgraded to a new mobo, the span has always stayed in tact. Why don't you use the sata ports on the mobo? Is it because of what you said:

"It's worth pointing out that the system without the new controller can only support 2TB max of SATA drives"

This seems odd to me. You never said the model of your motherboard.
Have you tried creating the span using disk manager?
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8
    CPU
    8 core AMD 8150
    Motherboard
    Gigabyte GA-890-fxa-UD5
    Memory
    4 sticks of 4GB Gskill 1333
    Graphics Card(s)
    Radeon HD 5700
    Hard Drives
    60GB Crucial M4 ssd
    two 2TB green WD
    one 1TB WD
    one 640GB WD
    PSU
    Corsair 750
    Case
    Antec 1200V3
    Cooling
    Arctic Freezer Pro
Or a dumbed down version of a Raid controller. I used to run Mirrored AND striped Arrays - 4 identical drives, striped AND mirrored. I would buy these cheap SiL Sata cards, I still have one of them, it has 4 ports, and it can't work in single disk mode, only as RAID. It worked great when one of the drives would fail, you just pop a new one right in there, has to be identical. Then the software for the drive would fix it on the spot, only took a little while.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8 Pro with Media Center/Windows 7
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Asus M2N-MX SE Plus § DualCore AMD Athlon 64 X2, 2300 MHz (11.5 x 200) 4400+ § Corsair Value Select
    CPU
    AMD 4400+/4200+
    Motherboard
    Asus M2N-MX SE Plus/Asus A8M2N-LA (NodusM)
    Memory
    2 GB/3GB
    Graphics Card(s)
    GeForce 8400 GS/GeForce 210
    Sound Card
    nVIDIA GT218 - High Definition Audio Controller
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Hitachi 40" LCD HDTV
    Screen Resolution
    "1842 x 1036"
    Hard Drives
    WDC WD50 00AAKS-007AA SCSI Disk Device
    ST1000DL 002-9TT153 SCSI Disk Device
    WDC WD3200AAJB-00J3A0 ATA Device
    WDC WD32 WD-WCAPZ2942630 USB Device
    WD My Book 1140 USB Device
    PSU
    Works 550w
    Case
    MSI "M-Box"
    Cooling
    Water Cooled
    Keyboard
    Dell Keyboard
    Mouse
    Microsoft Intellimouse
    Internet Speed
    Cable Medium Speed
    Browser
    Chrome/IE 10
    Antivirus
    Eset NOD32 6.x/Win Defend
    Other Info
    Recently lost my Windows 8 on my main PC, had to go back to Windows 7.
Yeah i heard a lot of those cards can be fickle with stuff like that. Thats why i chose a board with 8 sata ports. After the os drive, personal drive, and 2 optical drives, i still have enough room for 4 hdds for movie storage.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8
    CPU
    8 core AMD 8150
    Motherboard
    Gigabyte GA-890-fxa-UD5
    Memory
    4 sticks of 4GB Gskill 1333
    Graphics Card(s)
    Radeon HD 5700
    Hard Drives
    60GB Crucial M4 ssd
    two 2TB green WD
    one 1TB WD
    one 640GB WD
    PSU
    Corsair 750
    Case
    Antec 1200V3
    Cooling
    Arctic Freezer Pro
storage spaces seems like a dumbed down version of disk management. I've never used an add-in sata controller card. I wonder if it's a port multiplier problem on the card. I always just use the sata ports on my mobo. It has always been safe. I have upgraded BIOS', wiped the hard drive and installed windows 7 & 8 a bunch of times and even upgraded to a new mobo, the span has always stayed in tact. Why don't you use the sata ports on the mobo? Is it because of what you said:

"It's worth pointing out that the system without the new controller can only support 2TB max of SATA drives"

This seems odd to me. You never said the model of your motherboard.
Have you tried creating the span using disk manager?


storage spaces is new and disk management's replacement, thats why it's being pushed with Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012. The drives can be of random sizes and interfaces, you can add further drives at a later time without losing data to expand your pools. There is 3 different types of resiliency (parity,2-way mirror, 3-way mirror) etc,

But the virtues of that versus disk management or hardware raid are outside the scope of this post and really off topic.

"This seems odd to me. You never said the model of your motherboard. "
The system is a Proliant ML110 G4. Which has a max total storage of 2TB via SATA. It's not uncommon for some older boards to be have a max capacity with storage.

But to be honest, if you've not had experience with storage spaces, I'm not sure you can help.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8 64-Bit
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