mikeiver1 wrote:
I have had a similar issue with my server and it not seeing the drives as the native size of 3TB. I have them hung off of a 3Ware 9550 card to no avail. These are the WD red drives and are advanced format types. They show up as about 750GB drives and nothing I can do fixes this. I also tried the on board SAS controller and the same issue happens. The WD dries are the issue and not linux. They are obviously a nightmare. I also have a 1TB and a 1.5TB Seagate NS series drive in the box and both controllers see them just fine with no issues. WD tells me that there is no issue, a lie, and that it must be may hardware/ OS at fault. There are no tools or other fixes to be had from them so at this point I am in kinda the same boat as you are. I have tried both NASLite and Ubuntu server 64bit with the same result. If you want storage to work in your NASLite box, don't buy WD go Seagate. Lesson learned by me at least. Just wish I knew this before buying 3 of the Fecken things. 9TB of storage gone basically to waste not to mention all my time invested to find out it is WD at the root of the problem.
I know this is not the answer you want to hear but it is what I have found.
Mike
How come you are so sure it is not Linux at fault? I am not critisising or anything, I am just curious why you seem so sure it is a WD problem...
Assuming you can use a WD drive in any OS, one would assume that it should also be fine in another compatible OS such as Linux.
...but perhaps that is false logic?
I currently have 3x 3TB WD Red's in another server, but that is running Windoze 8 64-bit. For the most part, it is fine, but boy oh boy - the loops I had to jump through to get the fecking networking working - Bill Gates does not make it easy, unless you are willing to do it MS's way!
That is one major advantage of NL2, IMHO - once setup, ANYONE can access it if they know how. If you set up mapped drives on Windoze machines to the NL2 server, you can access these fine, but NL2 does not show up in Network Neighbourhood, which is good, cos it makes NL2 kinda like a hidden network.
...but I digress...
Perhaps you could follow the yellow brick road?
Get a Linux live-CD, delete anything on your red's, and format the whole drive using Gparted or similar, as one big ext3 volume. In my case, using Puppy 4.3.1(which is what I had on hand - might be out of date), the ext3 format took about 45 minutes for the 2.5TB WD Green drive.
That done, maybe NL will see your red's like it then could see my green. Unmounting the puppy-formatted drive, and reformatting from within NL would still be a good idea, I expect, going on what Ralph posted, but PERHAPS that is worth a try? Maybe Gparted's long-format process erases the default advanced format of the drive.