Hi all -
I have a customer with a pretty simple setup so I hope someone can give me some pointers to avoid a disaster on this one....
I have NT Server 4.0 SP6a running on hardware dated circa 1999. The system is a standalone server with (2) 8-Gig IDE drives, one drive being a mirror of the first. The customer wants to retire/replace these drives with (2) 40-Gig drives.
My thought process was:
1. Break the mirror
2. Use PowerQuest DriveCopy 4 to duplicate the 8 Gig primary drive image to the new 40 Gig primary drive
3. Bootup under the new 40 gig
4. Partition the extra space
5. Re-generate the mirror to the 40 Gig drives
Sounds simple, but I'm worried about things like the hardware abstraction layer and boot.ini and stuff complaining at step 3 above because I changed the hardware (drives). I'll bet dollars to donuts that if I did this I would get a blue screen of death on bootup.
Please help with any ideas or suggestions as to this process so I can make it as smooth as possible.
Thanks in advance as all your help has been great in the past!
- Bob
I have a customer with a pretty simple setup so I hope someone can give me some pointers to avoid a disaster on this one....
I have NT Server 4.0 SP6a running on hardware dated circa 1999. The system is a standalone server with (2) 8-Gig IDE drives, one drive being a mirror of the first. The customer wants to retire/replace these drives with (2) 40-Gig drives.
My thought process was:
1. Break the mirror
2. Use PowerQuest DriveCopy 4 to duplicate the 8 Gig primary drive image to the new 40 Gig primary drive
3. Bootup under the new 40 gig
4. Partition the extra space
5. Re-generate the mirror to the 40 Gig drives
Sounds simple, but I'm worried about things like the hardware abstraction layer and boot.ini and stuff complaining at step 3 above because I changed the hardware (drives). I'll bet dollars to donuts that if I did this I would get a blue screen of death on bootup.
Please help with any ideas or suggestions as to this process so I can make it as smooth as possible.
Thanks in advance as all your help has been great in the past!
- Bob