I recently replaced my main OS drive (old harddisk / not part of the pool) that was running WHS2011 to a new SSD running Windows 11. No other hardware was changed and I removed the storage drives whilst the OS change happened (3 drives)
Having re-installed the drives they all were recognised correctly and I was able to rebuild the pool and activate my licence. Everything seemed ok.
As a matter of caution I started a full disk scan using Stablebit Scanner - I *think* this is where things started going wrong. It advised that all disks and the pool drive had a damaged file system. That said, everything still seemed ok. No bad sectors found, no issues with SMART etc...
However, over the next few weeks I noticed an increasing amount of files starting to show 0 bytes and not being able to be opened. It seemed quite random but was getting increasingly worse. At this point could then hear the server accessing the Drive(s) a lot (constant writing sounds) and shut down the machine as I was going on holiday (Machine is an HP Microserver that is used mostly for file sharing).
Had a moment to do some research, reached out and raised a support ticket. Fired the machine up and ran chkdsk /r /f on one of the drives (the smallest one) - this took many hours and I never saw the result as it had to do a reboot to initiate etc..
However, I then reset the status of the affected drive in Stablebit and it was now healthy - just to check I reset the other drives and they were also now also showing healthly (I hadn't run chkdsk /r/f on those).
I guess I am now looking for advice for next course of action. I have a lot of files with 0bytes on them. I already did some more research and reset all the drive security permissions as they did not match the expected structure shown here
Example - one drive went from this
to this
Have cloud backups (backblaze) so should be able to manually restore but really looking for any thoughts on what may have caused the problem and the best way to properly identify all files and the safest way to replace the damaged ones.
Not knowing the start point I am worried about just restoring files at random/manually. I also think there are a lot of random files that were affected so not really sure on how best to go about finding them all/replacing
Question
Slamdunk
I recently replaced my main OS drive (old harddisk / not part of the pool) that was running WHS2011 to a new SSD running Windows 11. No other hardware was changed and I removed the storage drives whilst the OS change happened (3 drives)
Having re-installed the drives they all were recognised correctly and I was able to rebuild the pool and activate my licence. Everything seemed ok.
As a matter of caution I started a full disk scan using Stablebit Scanner - I *think* this is where things started going wrong. It advised that all disks and the pool drive had a damaged file system. That said, everything still seemed ok. No bad sectors found, no issues with SMART etc...
However, over the next few weeks I noticed an increasing amount of files starting to show 0 bytes and not being able to be opened. It seemed quite random but was getting increasingly worse. At this point could then hear the server accessing the Drive(s) a lot (constant writing sounds) and shut down the machine as I was going on holiday (Machine is an HP Microserver that is used mostly for file sharing).
Had a moment to do some research, reached out and raised a support ticket. Fired the machine up and ran chkdsk /r /f on one of the drives (the smallest one) - this took many hours and I never saw the result as it had to do a reboot to initiate etc..
However, I then reset the status of the affected drive in Stablebit and it was now healthy - just to check I reset the other drives and they were also now also showing healthly (I hadn't run chkdsk /r/f on those).
I guess I am now looking for advice for next course of action. I have a lot of files with 0bytes on them. I already did some more research and reset all the drive security permissions as they did not match the expected structure shown here
Example - one drive went from this
to this
Have cloud backups (backblaze) so should be able to manually restore but really looking for any thoughts on what may have caused the problem and the best way to properly identify all files and the safest way to replace the damaged ones.
Not knowing the start point I am worried about just restoring files at random/manually. I also think there are a lot of random files that were affected so not really sure on how best to go about finding them all/replacing
Appreciate any advice
Thanks
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