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NVRAID install failure

 
 
Jon Davis
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-11-2006
NForce4 (MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum) 3 WD SATA hard drives, 2 are RAIDed in a
striping array. So first (to get the story out of the way) I tried booting
Vista x64 RC1 setup via DVD and using the nVidia nForce4 drivers for Vista
RC1 on CD-RW to load the RAID drivers during boot/setup but the drivers
would not load. Kept trying this for a couple days, gave up.

Then I found another hard drive lying around, formatted it, installed
Windows XP Pro x64 Ed., and then installed the appropriate XP x64 drivers
from nVidia, and then ran the Vista x64 RC1 DVD. The RAID drive could now be
seen (as it was visible now in XP), but it still said it could not be
installed without the appropriate drivers. I then tried the nVidia nForce4
drivers for Vista RC1 and now it was INSTALLING!!

The setup files copied completely over and the computer rebooted. Then it
said, "Could not find the selected partition for the installation target."
It proceeded to rollback and cancel setup without so much as a "Retry" or
"Reload driver".

Now what?

I am pondering the idea of restarting with installing XP x64 on the RAID
array itself rather than a spare HD w/ the RAID drivers. But I don't have a
working floppy drive, and XP requires the floppy. Considering a USB floppy,
but don't know if my mb supports it. Aarrgh...

- Jon


 
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Jon Davis
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-11-2006
This thread was mistitled... NVRAID is the software RAID solution, I think,
rather than the hardware RAID. I am using hardware RAID, which comes with my
nVidia nForce4 chipset.

Jon


 
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Brian P Fielding
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-11-2006
Firstly: I believe the nForce RC1 drivers on the nVidia site are not nForce4
drivers - they are for 570/590 controllers.

I would install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 (or more recent) x64
drivers. These drivers should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or a
non-raid hard drive.

You should be able to install Vista x64 by booting from the DVD. After
completing the preliminaries you get to the stage when Vista queries which
partition to load Vista - now click on "Load Driver" and using Browse locate
the nForce4 drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in driver or WinXP
folder in the IDE folder). You should then see all the partitions available.
You should select a suitable, unused partition and then follow the
instructions to complete the install.

Now, I and a number of others have not been successful with this; no
partititions are made visible after loading the drivers. But a workaround
is as follows:

Install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 x64 drivers. These drivers should
also be copied to a USB stick, CD or on the non-raid hard drive. In Win XP
x64, load the Vista X64 DVD and click install.

you should then be able to install Vista x64 on a different partition to
that used by WinXP x64. At the stage when Vista queries which partition to
load Vista click on "Load Driver" and using Browse locate the nForce4
drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in driver or WinXP folder in the
IDE folder). . You should then see all the partitions available. You should
select a suitable, unused partition and then follow the instructions to
complete the install.

Hope this helps
Brian



"Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
news:...
> This thread was mistitled... NVRAID is the software RAID solution, I
> think, rather than the hardware RAID. I am using hardware RAID, which
> comes with my nVidia nForce4 chipset.
>
> Jon
>
>



 
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Robert R. Johnson Jr
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-11-2006
Jon I can tell you that this hasn't worked for me even using the X86 raid
drivers and x86 Vista version and I have the same exact motherboard. I have
a total of 4 western digital SATA drives and two drives form a sata raid 0
and the other two a sata raid 0 also which I use for backup purposes. No
matter what I tried I could not get the Nforce drivers from the NVIDIA site
nor any older XP sataraid drivers to be recognized by the Vista setup
routine. The load drivers option failed miserably. This is an option that
Microsoft needs to make sure is fixed.


"Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
news:...
> NForce4 (MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum) 3 WD SATA hard drives, 2 are RAIDed in a
> striping array. So first (to get the story out of the way) I tried booting
> Vista x64 RC1 setup via DVD and using the nVidia nForce4 drivers for Vista
> RC1 on CD-RW to load the RAID drivers during boot/setup but the drivers
> would not load. Kept trying this for a couple days, gave up.
>
> Then I found another hard drive lying around, formatted it, installed
> Windows XP Pro x64 Ed., and then installed the appropriate XP x64 drivers
> from nVidia, and then ran the Vista x64 RC1 DVD. The RAID drive could now
> be
> seen (as it was visible now in XP), but it still said it could not be
> installed without the appropriate drivers. I then tried the nVidia nForce4
> drivers for Vista RC1 and now it was INSTALLING!!
>
> The setup files copied completely over and the computer rebooted. Then it
> said, "Could not find the selected partition for the installation target."
> It proceeded to rollback and cancel setup without so much as a "Retry" or
> "Reload driver".
>
> Now what?
>
> I am pondering the idea of restarting with installing XP x64 on the RAID
> array itself rather than a spare HD w/ the RAID drivers. But I don't have
> a working floppy drive, and XP requires the floppy. Considering a USB
> floppy, but don't know if my mb supports it. Aarrgh...
>
> - Jon
>
>


 
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Jon Davis
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-11-2006
Thank you. But after doing this exactly as you describe, as well as trying
again with the setup DVD but with the XP drivers, I get the exact same
results as the original post using the RC1 drivers. Setup sees the partition
fine when Setup is running in XP, but upon the first reboot Setup says
"Cannot find the partition selected for installation," and rolls back.

I just realized that you couldn't have read that I already indicated this
because you said that setup's configuration screen would "see" the RAID
array when loading the XP drivers, but I already said that the RC1 drivers
worked fine for getting Setup to see the RAID drive, but only failed to load
upon first reboot.

This is definitely broken on Microsoft's side. The drivers work fine (sorta,
although not at all when booting from the DVD), but loading the drivers in
the setup bootloader is NOT working fine.

Actually this may be a conflict of the drivers and Vista's bootloader or
kernel. XP sees the RAID fine, and Vista setup sees the RAID fine when going
through XP already running during initial Setup. But neither the DVD nor the
first reboot bootloader can see the RAID array using the same drivers. I
think something is going very weird on this side of Vista that seems to work
in Microsoft's and nVidia's test labs and for some other people but not for
me and some others.

My config: MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum (not SLI), Athlon 64 3000+. Three SATA
drives (Western Digital), one IDE drive. The two SATA drives are RAIDed, one
SATA drive has XP x86, the IDE drive has XP x64 (only for preloading Vista
setup). I do not know which SATA ports my three SATA drives are connected
to. I only learned recently that this might matter, but I'm fearful of
changing it lest I accidentally erase my data already on the RAID array.

Jon


"Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
news:...
> Firstly: I believe the nForce RC1 drivers on the nVidia site are not
> nForce4 drivers - they are for 570/590 controllers.
>
> I would install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 (or more recent) x64
> drivers. These drivers should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or a
> non-raid hard drive.
>
> You should be able to install Vista x64 by booting from the DVD. After
> completing the preliminaries you get to the stage when Vista queries which
> partition to load Vista - now click on "Load Driver" and using Browse
> locate the nForce4 drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in driver or
> WinXP folder in the IDE folder). You should then see all the partitions
> available. You should select a suitable, unused partition and then follow
> the instructions to complete the install.
>
> Now, I and a number of others have not been successful with this; no
> partititions are made visible after loading the drivers. But a workaround
> is as follows:
>
> Install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 x64 drivers. These drivers
> should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or on the non-raid hard drive.
> In Win XP x64, load the Vista X64 DVD and click install.
>
> you should then be able to install Vista x64 on a different partition to
> that used by WinXP x64. At the stage when Vista queries which partition
> to load Vista click on "Load Driver" and using Browse locate the nForce4
> drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in driver or WinXP folder in the
> IDE folder). . You should then see all the partitions available. You
> should select a suitable, unused partition and then follow the
> instructions to complete the install.
>
> Hope this helps
> Brian
>
>
>
> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
> news:...
>> This thread was mistitled... NVRAID is the software RAID solution, I
>> think, rather than the hardware RAID. I am using hardware RAID, which
>> comes with my nVidia nForce4 chipset.
>>
>> Jon
>>
>>

>
>



 
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Brian P Fielding
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-12-2006
Jon

I have re-read your original posting - I should read more carefully. The
difference between your situation and mine is that WinXP x64 is installed on
the Raid 0. The initial setup of Vista may use the nForce4 Raid drivers
from XP and so be in position to enable the partition selection to complete
correctly.

Installs from the DVD worked ok at Beta2 - but I cannot now install any
beta2 Vista by booting from DVD - something, I believe, has been changed on
the RAID setup during my attempts to install RC1 Vista. (I'm not going to
setup my Raid again to prove it)

It may be that you have to bite the bullet and get a floppy drive (I had no
success with a USB floppy drive on my board). But it obviously does not
make sense to have to install the appropriate WinXP before you install
Vista.

(I have to suffer with only half a video card being used - Vista is yet to
support SLI)

Brian

Using a Gigabyte GA-K8NXP-SLI with GV-3D1 video card (dual GeForce 6600 GT).



"Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
news:%...
> Thank you. But after doing this exactly as you describe, as well as trying
> again with the setup DVD but with the XP drivers, I get the exact same
> results as the original post using the RC1 drivers. Setup sees the
> partition fine when Setup is running in XP, but upon the first reboot
> Setup says "Cannot find the partition selected for installation," and
> rolls back.
>
> I just realized that you couldn't have read that I already indicated this
> because you said that setup's configuration screen would "see" the RAID
> array when loading the XP drivers, but I already said that the RC1 drivers
> worked fine for getting Setup to see the RAID drive, but only failed to
> load upon first reboot.
>
> This is definitely broken on Microsoft's side. The drivers work fine
> (sorta, although not at all when booting from the DVD), but loading the
> drivers in the setup bootloader is NOT working fine.
>
> Actually this may be a conflict of the drivers and Vista's bootloader or
> kernel. XP sees the RAID fine, and Vista setup sees the RAID fine when
> going through XP already running during initial Setup. But neither the DVD
> nor the first reboot bootloader can see the RAID array using the same
> drivers. I think something is going very weird on this side of Vista that
> seems to work in Microsoft's and nVidia's test labs and for some other
> people but not for me and some others.
>
> My config: MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum (not SLI), Athlon 64 3000+. Three SATA
> drives (Western Digital), one IDE drive. The two SATA drives are RAIDed,
> one SATA drive has XP x86, the IDE drive has XP x64 (only for preloading
> Vista setup). I do not know which SATA ports my three SATA drives are
> connected to. I only learned recently that this might matter, but I'm
> fearful of changing it lest I accidentally erase my data already on the
> RAID array.
>
> Jon
>
>
> "Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
> news:...
>> Firstly: I believe the nForce RC1 drivers on the nVidia site are not
>> nForce4 drivers - they are for 570/590 controllers.
>>
>> I would install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 (or more recent) x64
>> drivers. These drivers should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or a
>> non-raid hard drive.
>>
>> You should be able to install Vista x64 by booting from the DVD. After
>> completing the preliminaries you get to the stage when Vista queries
>> which partition to load Vista - now click on "Load Driver" and using
>> Browse locate the nForce4 drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in
>> driver or WinXP folder in the IDE folder). You should then see all the
>> partitions available. You should select a suitable, unused partition and
>> then follow the instructions to complete the install.
>>
>> Now, I and a number of others have not been successful with this; no
>> partititions are made visible after loading the drivers. But a
>> workaround is as follows:
>>
>> Install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 x64 drivers. These drivers
>> should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or on the non-raid hard drive.
>> In Win XP x64, load the Vista X64 DVD and click install.
>>
>> you should then be able to install Vista x64 on a different partition to
>> that used by WinXP x64. At the stage when Vista queries which partition
>> to load Vista click on "Load Driver" and using Browse locate the nForce4
>> drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in driver or WinXP folder in
>> the IDE folder). . You should then see all the partitions available. You
>> should select a suitable, unused partition and then follow the
>> instructions to complete the install.
>>
>> Hope this helps
>> Brian
>>
>>
>>
>> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
>> news:...
>>> This thread was mistitled... NVRAID is the software RAID solution, I
>>> think, rather than the hardware RAID. I am using hardware RAID, which
>>> comes with my nVidia nForce4 chipset.
>>>
>>> Jon
>>>
>>>

>>
>>

>
>



 
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Jon Davis
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-12-2006
Unplugged the non-RAID drives. Went out and bought a floppy drive for
installing XP to the RAID drive. The RAID drive has two partitions, the
primary partition is the target partition for Vista, the extended partition
is for my data and is the temporary target partition for XP. I installed XP,
using the floppy drive as needed for the RAID drivers. Once XP finished
setup I installed the full nForce driver suite and a few other drivers. Then
I ran Vista setup. Setup could see the Primary partition so I went ahead and
installed to it.

Now on reboot I get BSOD with error code 0x0000007b. Basically the same
thing (bad driver for hard drive volume).

Tried the Vista install using both XP and Vista drivers using this method,
same result.

Jon


"Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
news:...
> Jon
>
> I have re-read your original posting - I should read more carefully. The
> difference between your situation and mine is that WinXP x64 is installed
> on the Raid 0. The initial setup of Vista may use the nForce4 Raid
> drivers from XP and so be in position to enable the partition selection to
> complete correctly.
>
> Installs from the DVD worked ok at Beta2 - but I cannot now install any
> beta2 Vista by booting from DVD - something, I believe, has been changed
> on the RAID setup during my attempts to install RC1 Vista. (I'm not going
> to setup my Raid again to prove it)
>
> It may be that you have to bite the bullet and get a floppy drive (I had
> no success with a USB floppy drive on my board). But it obviously does
> not make sense to have to install the appropriate WinXP before you install
> Vista.
>
> (I have to suffer with only half a video card being used - Vista is yet to
> support SLI)
>
> Brian
>
> Using a Gigabyte GA-K8NXP-SLI with GV-3D1 video card (dual GeForce 6600
> GT).
>
>
>
> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
> news:%...
>> Thank you. But after doing this exactly as you describe, as well as
>> trying again with the setup DVD but with the XP drivers, I get the exact
>> same results as the original post using the RC1 drivers. Setup sees the
>> partition fine when Setup is running in XP, but upon the first reboot
>> Setup says "Cannot find the partition selected for installation," and
>> rolls back.
>>
>> I just realized that you couldn't have read that I already indicated this
>> because you said that setup's configuration screen would "see" the RAID
>> array when loading the XP drivers, but I already said that the RC1
>> drivers worked fine for getting Setup to see the RAID drive, but only
>> failed to load upon first reboot.
>>
>> This is definitely broken on Microsoft's side. The drivers work fine
>> (sorta, although not at all when booting from the DVD), but loading the
>> drivers in the setup bootloader is NOT working fine.
>>
>> Actually this may be a conflict of the drivers and Vista's bootloader or
>> kernel. XP sees the RAID fine, and Vista setup sees the RAID fine when
>> going through XP already running during initial Setup. But neither the
>> DVD nor the first reboot bootloader can see the RAID array using the same
>> drivers. I think something is going very weird on this side of Vista that
>> seems to work in Microsoft's and nVidia's test labs and for some other
>> people but not for me and some others.
>>
>> My config: MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum (not SLI), Athlon 64 3000+. Three SATA
>> drives (Western Digital), one IDE drive. The two SATA drives are RAIDed,
>> one SATA drive has XP x86, the IDE drive has XP x64 (only for preloading
>> Vista setup). I do not know which SATA ports my three SATA drives are
>> connected to. I only learned recently that this might matter, but I'm
>> fearful of changing it lest I accidentally erase my data already on the
>> RAID array.
>>
>> Jon
>>
>>
>> "Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
>> news:...
>>> Firstly: I believe the nForce RC1 drivers on the nVidia site are not
>>> nForce4 drivers - they are for 570/590 controllers.
>>>
>>> I would install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 (or more recent) x64
>>> drivers. These drivers should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or a
>>> non-raid hard drive.
>>>
>>> You should be able to install Vista x64 by booting from the DVD. After
>>> completing the preliminaries you get to the stage when Vista queries
>>> which partition to load Vista - now click on "Load Driver" and using
>>> Browse locate the nForce4 drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in
>>> driver or WinXP folder in the IDE folder). You should then see all the
>>> partitions available. You should select a suitable, unused partition and
>>> then follow the instructions to complete the install.
>>>
>>> Now, I and a number of others have not been successful with this; no
>>> partititions are made visible after loading the drivers. But a
>>> workaround is as follows:
>>>
>>> Install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 x64 drivers. These drivers
>>> should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or on the non-raid hard drive.
>>> In Win XP x64, load the Vista X64 DVD and click install.
>>>
>>> you should then be able to install Vista x64 on a different partition to
>>> that used by WinXP x64. At the stage when Vista queries which partition
>>> to load Vista click on "Load Driver" and using Browse locate the
>>> nForce4 drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in driver or WinXP
>>> folder in the IDE folder). . You should then see all the partitions
>>> available. You should select a suitable, unused partition and then
>>> follow the instructions to complete the install.
>>>
>>> Hope this helps
>>> Brian
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
>>> news:...
>>>> This thread was mistitled... NVRAID is the software RAID solution, I
>>>> think, rather than the hardware RAID. I am using hardware RAID, which
>>>> comes with my nVidia nForce4 chipset.
>>>>
>>>> Jon
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>

>>
>>

>
>



 
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Brian P Fielding
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-12-2006
You're not having a good time.

I get a 7b error if I attempt to use the RC1 nForce4 drivers. I did
reformat the target partition before attempting to re-install Vista.

Sorry, can't see anything else that may help

Brian.


"Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
news:...
> Unplugged the non-RAID drives. Went out and bought a floppy drive for
> installing XP to the RAID drive. The RAID drive has two partitions, the
> primary partition is the target partition for Vista, the extended
> partition is for my data and is the temporary target partition for XP. I
> installed XP, using the floppy drive as needed for the RAID drivers. Once
> XP finished setup I installed the full nForce driver suite and a few other
> drivers. Then I ran Vista setup. Setup could see the Primary partition so
> I went ahead and installed to it.
>
> Now on reboot I get BSOD with error code 0x0000007b. Basically the same
> thing (bad driver for hard drive volume).
>
> Tried the Vista install using both XP and Vista drivers using this method,
> same result.
>
> Jon
>
>
> "Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
> news:...
>> Jon
>>
>> I have re-read your original posting - I should read more carefully. The
>> difference between your situation and mine is that WinXP x64 is installed
>> on the Raid 0. The initial setup of Vista may use the nForce4 Raid
>> drivers from XP and so be in position to enable the partition selection
>> to complete correctly.
>>
>> Installs from the DVD worked ok at Beta2 - but I cannot now install any
>> beta2 Vista by booting from DVD - something, I believe, has been changed
>> on the RAID setup during my attempts to install RC1 Vista. (I'm not going
>> to setup my Raid again to prove it)
>>
>> It may be that you have to bite the bullet and get a floppy drive (I had
>> no success with a USB floppy drive on my board). But it obviously does
>> not make sense to have to install the appropriate WinXP before you
>> install Vista.
>>
>> (I have to suffer with only half a video card being used - Vista is yet
>> to support SLI)
>>
>> Brian
>>
>> Using a Gigabyte GA-K8NXP-SLI with GV-3D1 video card (dual GeForce 6600
>> GT).
>>
>>
>>
>> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
>> news:%...
>>> Thank you. But after doing this exactly as you describe, as well as
>>> trying again with the setup DVD but with the XP drivers, I get the exact
>>> same results as the original post using the RC1 drivers. Setup sees the
>>> partition fine when Setup is running in XP, but upon the first reboot
>>> Setup says "Cannot find the partition selected for installation," and
>>> rolls back.
>>>
>>> I just realized that you couldn't have read that I already indicated
>>> this because you said that setup's configuration screen would "see" the
>>> RAID array when loading the XP drivers, but I already said that the RC1
>>> drivers worked fine for getting Setup to see the RAID drive, but only
>>> failed to load upon first reboot.
>>>
>>> This is definitely broken on Microsoft's side. The drivers work fine
>>> (sorta, although not at all when booting from the DVD), but loading the
>>> drivers in the setup bootloader is NOT working fine.
>>>
>>> Actually this may be a conflict of the drivers and Vista's bootloader or
>>> kernel. XP sees the RAID fine, and Vista setup sees the RAID fine when
>>> going through XP already running during initial Setup. But neither the
>>> DVD nor the first reboot bootloader can see the RAID array using the
>>> same drivers. I think something is going very weird on this side of
>>> Vista that seems to work in Microsoft's and nVidia's test labs and for
>>> some other people but not for me and some others.
>>>
>>> My config: MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum (not SLI), Athlon 64 3000+. Three SATA
>>> drives (Western Digital), one IDE drive. The two SATA drives are RAIDed,
>>> one SATA drive has XP x86, the IDE drive has XP x64 (only for preloading
>>> Vista setup). I do not know which SATA ports my three SATA drives are
>>> connected to. I only learned recently that this might matter, but I'm
>>> fearful of changing it lest I accidentally erase my data already on the
>>> RAID array.
>>>
>>> Jon
>>>
>>>
>>> "Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
>>> news:...
>>>> Firstly: I believe the nForce RC1 drivers on the nVidia site are not
>>>> nForce4 drivers - they are for 570/590 controllers.
>>>>
>>>> I would install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 (or more recent) x64
>>>> drivers. These drivers should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or a
>>>> non-raid hard drive.
>>>>
>>>> You should be able to install Vista x64 by booting from the DVD. After
>>>> completing the preliminaries you get to the stage when Vista queries
>>>> which partition to load Vista - now click on "Load Driver" and using
>>>> Browse locate the nForce4 drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in
>>>> driver or WinXP folder in the IDE folder). You should then see all the
>>>> partitions available. You should select a suitable, unused partition
>>>> and then follow the instructions to complete the install.
>>>>
>>>> Now, I and a number of others have not been successful with this; no
>>>> partititions are made visible after loading the drivers. But a
>>>> workaround is as follows:
>>>>
>>>> Install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 x64 drivers. These drivers
>>>> should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or on the non-raid hard drive.
>>>> In Win XP x64, load the Vista X64 DVD and click install.
>>>>
>>>> you should then be able to install Vista x64 on a different partition
>>>> to that used by WinXP x64. At the stage when Vista queries which
>>>> partition to load Vista click on "Load Driver" and using Browse locate
>>>> the nForce4 drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in driver or
>>>> WinXP folder in the IDE folder). . You should then see all the
>>>> partitions available. You should select a suitable, unused partition
>>>> and then follow the instructions to complete the install.
>>>>
>>>> Hope this helps
>>>> Brian
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
>>>> news:...
>>>>> This thread was mistitled... NVRAID is the software RAID solution, I
>>>>> think, rather than the hardware RAID. I am using hardware RAID, which
>>>>> comes with my nVidia nForce4 chipset.
>>>>>
>>>>> Jon
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>

>>
>>

>
>



 
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Jon Davis
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-12-2006
Was XP as your temporary preinstall put on your primary RAID partition or
your extended RAID partition? I thought perhaps my putting XP on the
extended RAID partition might affect things, even though the bootloader for
XP is on the primary partition. But what do I know anymore?

Jon

"Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
news:OU$...
> You're not having a good time.
>
> I get a 7b error if I attempt to use the RC1 nForce4 drivers. I did
> reformat the target partition before attempting to re-install Vista.
>
> Sorry, can't see anything else that may help
>
> Brian.
>
>
> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
> news:...
>> Unplugged the non-RAID drives. Went out and bought a floppy drive for
>> installing XP to the RAID drive. The RAID drive has two partitions, the
>> primary partition is the target partition for Vista, the extended
>> partition is for my data and is the temporary target partition for XP. I
>> installed XP, using the floppy drive as needed for the RAID drivers. Once
>> XP finished setup I installed the full nForce driver suite and a few
>> other drivers. Then I ran Vista setup. Setup could see the Primary
>> partition so I went ahead and installed to it.
>>
>> Now on reboot I get BSOD with error code 0x0000007b. Basically the same
>> thing (bad driver for hard drive volume).
>>
>> Tried the Vista install using both XP and Vista drivers using this
>> method, same result.
>>
>> Jon
>>
>>
>> "Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
>> news:...
>>> Jon
>>>
>>> I have re-read your original posting - I should read more carefully.
>>> The difference between your situation and mine is that WinXP x64 is
>>> installed on the Raid 0. The initial setup of Vista may use the nForce4
>>> Raid drivers from XP and so be in position to enable the partition
>>> selection to complete correctly.
>>>
>>> Installs from the DVD worked ok at Beta2 - but I cannot now install any
>>> beta2 Vista by booting from DVD - something, I believe, has been
>>> changed on the RAID setup during my attempts to install RC1 Vista. (I'm
>>> not going to setup my Raid again to prove it)
>>>
>>> It may be that you have to bite the bullet and get a floppy drive (I had
>>> no success with a USB floppy drive on my board). But it obviously does
>>> not make sense to have to install the appropriate WinXP before you
>>> install Vista.
>>>
>>> (I have to suffer with only half a video card being used - Vista is yet
>>> to support SLI)
>>>
>>> Brian
>>>
>>> Using a Gigabyte GA-K8NXP-SLI with GV-3D1 video card (dual GeForce 6600
>>> GT).
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
>>> news:%...
>>>> Thank you. But after doing this exactly as you describe, as well as
>>>> trying again with the setup DVD but with the XP drivers, I get the
>>>> exact same results as the original post using the RC1 drivers. Setup
>>>> sees the partition fine when Setup is running in XP, but upon the first
>>>> reboot Setup says "Cannot find the partition selected for
>>>> installation," and rolls back.
>>>>
>>>> I just realized that you couldn't have read that I already indicated
>>>> this because you said that setup's configuration screen would "see" the
>>>> RAID array when loading the XP drivers, but I already said that the RC1
>>>> drivers worked fine for getting Setup to see the RAID drive, but only
>>>> failed to load upon first reboot.
>>>>
>>>> This is definitely broken on Microsoft's side. The drivers work fine
>>>> (sorta, although not at all when booting from the DVD), but loading the
>>>> drivers in the setup bootloader is NOT working fine.
>>>>
>>>> Actually this may be a conflict of the drivers and Vista's bootloader
>>>> or kernel. XP sees the RAID fine, and Vista setup sees the RAID fine
>>>> when going through XP already running during initial Setup. But neither
>>>> the DVD nor the first reboot bootloader can see the RAID array using
>>>> the same drivers. I think something is going very weird on this side of
>>>> Vista that seems to work in Microsoft's and nVidia's test labs and for
>>>> some other people but not for me and some others.
>>>>
>>>> My config: MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum (not SLI), Athlon 64 3000+. Three SATA
>>>> drives (Western Digital), one IDE drive. The two SATA drives are
>>>> RAIDed, one SATA drive has XP x86, the IDE drive has XP x64 (only for
>>>> preloading Vista setup). I do not know which SATA ports my three SATA
>>>> drives are connected to. I only learned recently that this might
>>>> matter, but I'm fearful of changing it lest I accidentally erase my
>>>> data already on the RAID array.
>>>>
>>>> Jon
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> "Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
>>>> news:...
>>>>> Firstly: I believe the nForce RC1 drivers on the nVidia site are not
>>>>> nForce4 drivers - they are for 570/590 controllers.
>>>>>
>>>>> I would install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 (or more recent) x64
>>>>> drivers. These drivers should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or a
>>>>> non-raid hard drive.
>>>>>
>>>>> You should be able to install Vista x64 by booting from the DVD.
>>>>> After completing the preliminaries you get to the stage when Vista
>>>>> queries which partition to load Vista - now click on "Load Driver" and
>>>>> using Browse locate the nForce4 drivers (these are in the sataraid
>>>>> folder in driver or WinXP folder in the IDE folder). You should then
>>>>> see all the partitions available. You should select a suitable, unused
>>>>> partition and then follow the instructions to complete the install.
>>>>>
>>>>> Now, I and a number of others have not been successful with this; no
>>>>> partititions are made visible after loading the drivers. But a
>>>>> workaround is as follows:
>>>>>
>>>>> Install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 x64 drivers. These drivers
>>>>> should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or on the non-raid hard
>>>>> drive. In Win XP x64, load the Vista X64 DVD and click install.
>>>>>
>>>>> you should then be able to install Vista x64 on a different partition
>>>>> to that used by WinXP x64. At the stage when Vista queries which
>>>>> partition to load Vista click on "Load Driver" and using Browse
>>>>> locate the nForce4 drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in driver
>>>>> or WinXP folder in the IDE folder). . You should then see all the
>>>>> partitions available. You should select a suitable, unused partition
>>>>> and then follow the instructions to complete the install.
>>>>>
>>>>> Hope this helps
>>>>> Brian
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
>>>>> news:...
>>>>>> This thread was mistitled... NVRAID is the software RAID solution, I
>>>>>> think, rather than the hardware RAID. I am using hardware RAID, which
>>>>>> comes with my nVidia nForce4 chipset.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Jon
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>

>>
>>

>
>



 
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Brian P Fielding
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      09-13-2006
Probably more than you would admit !? Vista RC1 in terms of nVidia has gone
well off track, it is problematic to a large number of users, which
certainly includes me.

I don't consider my WinXP (D: drive) as a temporary preinstall - I use it,
rightly or wrongly in terms of beta testing, as my primary PC - I use it
regularly/daily/ hourly - whatever. It is basically an user account which
is part of a domain. The overall setup I have is a SBS based domain with 2
workstations + 2 laptops and is used partly for my use (+ the "Beloved"
wife's) and more generally as a test site for our small business (SBS server
+ workstations + laptops)

My PC is set up with a Raid 0 with 2 150 GB Maxtor drives - a total size of
305 GB. It also has a 150 GB drive on the Silicon Image Controller which I
use for the pagefile, work files, backup etc

The raid has a small primary partition C: (5 MB) and an extended partition
with 4 logical drives each of 75 MB (drives D: to G

C: is the system drive, holds bootloader etc (no OS is installed here) , D:
Win XP Pro, E: Vista x86, F: Vista x64, G: Win XP Pro x64 (G: is truly
temporary as I had to be set it up in order to install Vista x64)

Hope this helps

Brian



"Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
news:...
> Was XP as your temporary preinstall put on your primary RAID partition or
> your extended RAID partition? I thought perhaps my putting XP on the
> extended RAID partition might affect things, even though the bootloader
> for XP is on the primary partition. But what do I know anymore?
>
> Jon
>
> "Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
> news:OU$...
>> You're not having a good time.
>>
>> I get a 7b error if I attempt to use the RC1 nForce4 drivers. I did
>> reformat the target partition before attempting to re-install Vista.
>>
>> Sorry, can't see anything else that may help
>>
>> Brian.
>>
>>
>> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
>> news:...
>>> Unplugged the non-RAID drives. Went out and bought a floppy drive for
>>> installing XP to the RAID drive. The RAID drive has two partitions, the
>>> primary partition is the target partition for Vista, the extended
>>> partition is for my data and is the temporary target partition for XP. I
>>> installed XP, using the floppy drive as needed for the RAID drivers.
>>> Once XP finished setup I installed the full nForce driver suite and a
>>> few other drivers. Then I ran Vista setup. Setup could see the Primary
>>> partition so I went ahead and installed to it.
>>>
>>> Now on reboot I get BSOD with error code 0x0000007b. Basically the same
>>> thing (bad driver for hard drive volume).
>>>
>>> Tried the Vista install using both XP and Vista drivers using this
>>> method, same result.
>>>
>>> Jon
>>>
>>>
>>> "Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
>>> news:...
>>>> Jon
>>>>
>>>> I have re-read your original posting - I should read more carefully.
>>>> The difference between your situation and mine is that WinXP x64 is
>>>> installed on the Raid 0. The initial setup of Vista may use the
>>>> nForce4 Raid drivers from XP and so be in position to enable the
>>>> partition selection to complete correctly.
>>>>
>>>> Installs from the DVD worked ok at Beta2 - but I cannot now install any
>>>> beta2 Vista by booting from DVD - something, I believe, has been
>>>> changed on the RAID setup during my attempts to install RC1 Vista. (I'm
>>>> not going to setup my Raid again to prove it)
>>>>
>>>> It may be that you have to bite the bullet and get a floppy drive (I
>>>> had no success with a USB floppy drive on my board). But it obviously
>>>> does not make sense to have to install the appropriate WinXP before you
>>>> install Vista.
>>>>
>>>> (I have to suffer with only half a video card being used - Vista is yet
>>>> to support SLI)
>>>>
>>>> Brian
>>>>
>>>> Using a Gigabyte GA-K8NXP-SLI with GV-3D1 video card (dual GeForce 6600
>>>> GT).
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
>>>> news:%...
>>>>> Thank you. But after doing this exactly as you describe, as well as
>>>>> trying again with the setup DVD but with the XP drivers, I get the
>>>>> exact same results as the original post using the RC1 drivers. Setup
>>>>> sees the partition fine when Setup is running in XP, but upon the
>>>>> first reboot Setup says "Cannot find the partition selected for
>>>>> installation," and rolls back.
>>>>>
>>>>> I just realized that you couldn't have read that I already indicated
>>>>> this because you said that setup's configuration screen would "see"
>>>>> the RAID array when loading the XP drivers, but I already said that
>>>>> the RC1 drivers worked fine for getting Setup to see the RAID drive,
>>>>> but only failed to load upon first reboot.
>>>>>
>>>>> This is definitely broken on Microsoft's side. The drivers work fine
>>>>> (sorta, although not at all when booting from the DVD), but loading
>>>>> the drivers in the setup bootloader is NOT working fine.
>>>>>
>>>>> Actually this may be a conflict of the drivers and Vista's bootloader
>>>>> or kernel. XP sees the RAID fine, and Vista setup sees the RAID fine
>>>>> when going through XP already running during initial Setup. But
>>>>> neither the DVD nor the first reboot bootloader can see the RAID array
>>>>> using the same drivers. I think something is going very weird on this
>>>>> side of Vista that seems to work in Microsoft's and nVidia's test labs
>>>>> and for some other people but not for me and some others.
>>>>>
>>>>> My config: MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum (not SLI), Athlon 64 3000+. Three
>>>>> SATA drives (Western Digital), one IDE drive. The two SATA drives are
>>>>> RAIDed, one SATA drive has XP x86, the IDE drive has XP x64 (only for
>>>>> preloading Vista setup). I do not know which SATA ports my three SATA
>>>>> drives are connected to. I only learned recently that this might
>>>>> matter, but I'm fearful of changing it lest I accidentally erase my
>>>>> data already on the RAID array.
>>>>>
>>>>> Jon
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> "Brian P Fielding" <> wrote in message
>>>>> news:...
>>>>>> Firstly: I believe the nForce RC1 drivers on the nVidia site are not
>>>>>> nForce4 drivers - they are for 570/590 controllers.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I would install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 (or more recent) x64
>>>>>> drivers. These drivers should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or a
>>>>>> non-raid hard drive.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> You should be able to install Vista x64 by booting from the DVD.
>>>>>> After completing the preliminaries you get to the stage when Vista
>>>>>> queries which partition to load Vista - now click on "Load Driver"
>>>>>> and using Browse locate the nForce4 drivers (these are in the
>>>>>> sataraid folder in driver or WinXP folder in the IDE folder). You
>>>>>> should then see all the partitions available. You should select a
>>>>>> suitable, unused partition and then follow the instructions to
>>>>>> complete the install.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Now, I and a number of others have not been successful with this; no
>>>>>> partititions are made visible after loading the drivers. But a
>>>>>> workaround is as follows:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Install Windows XP x64 using nForce 6.86 x64 drivers. These drivers
>>>>>> should also be copied to a USB stick, CD or on the non-raid hard
>>>>>> drive. In Win XP x64, load the Vista X64 DVD and click install.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> you should then be able to install Vista x64 on a different partition
>>>>>> to that used by WinXP x64. At the stage when Vista queries which
>>>>>> partition to load Vista click on "Load Driver" and using Browse
>>>>>> locate the nForce4 drivers (these are in the sataraid folder in
>>>>>> driver or WinXP folder in the IDE folder). . You should then see all
>>>>>> the partitions available. You should select a suitable, unused
>>>>>> partition and then follow the instructions to complete the install.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Hope this helps
>>>>>> Brian
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> "Jon Davis" <> wrote in message
>>>>>> news:...
>>>>>>> This thread was mistitled... NVRAID is the software RAID solution, I
>>>>>>> think, rather than the hardware RAID. I am using hardware RAID,
>>>>>>> which comes with my nVidia nForce4 chipset.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Jon
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>

>>
>>

>
>



 
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