![Alpha Micro Eagle 800 II Series Скачать руководство пользователя страница 20](http://html1.mh-extra.com/html/alpha-micro/eagle-800-ii-series/eagle-800-ii-series_service-manual_2905703020.webp)
Page 16
Eagle 800 Series II Service Manual
Rev. A00
{1 Primary NTFS, Disk Load, New Size 39197} an input box is highlighting the New Size or use
the Old size number which the drive was partitioned for which is displayed on the right.
{In Destination drive details} –
BACKSPACE
to delete new size and
type
in (
your number)
if the number displayed is wrong.
Type the number written on the left side of the CD label. Examples below:
C:
5004
is the Eagle 800 Volume size for Series II systems.
C:
19602
is the Eagle 800 Volume size for early systems.
C:
19092
is the value of some Eagle 800 Internal RAID systems.
Press
ENTER
. If the drives were resized during the manufacturing phase, the new number will be
written on the CD label. If the number being entered is larger than the original C: drive size, the
next partition the E: drive will get written over and you will loose the E: drive data. Be very careful
and accurate.
11.
Press
the
TAB
key
to select
{
OK
},
press
ENTER
.
12. The message box will display and ask
<Proceed with disk restore?
Destination drive will be permanently overwritten>
13. Now to start the <Norton Ghost restore>, [No] is highlighted so you can cancel this operation if you
wish.
Press
the
to
{
YES
}, then
press
ENTER
to execute the Restore.
14. Allow the Ghost Software to restore the data. This takes about 10 minutes for the first logical. After
the drive is loaded from CD, Ghost will ask to <Reset Computer>
Press
ENTER
and allow system to
restart.
15.
Eject
the CD and remove it. Place it back in the storage jewel case.
16. When the system restarts,
press
the
ESC
key on the keyboard during the 5-second count down.
Execute the windows <Explorer> application and inspect the C: and E: volumes. If the drive was empty,
the operator must initialize the E: DataVolume drive as described earlier in this document.
Getting to a Production Configuration
If you had changed any of the AM8000 configuration information since creating the bootable backup
DVD, such as adding Microsoft Network printers, COMxx ports, SCSI devices, firewall settings, etc.,
then you will need to repeat those changes.
In addition, the AM8000.INI, and other customized .INI files, and perhaps even the AM8000.MON, may
not be current. Production versions are normally on the AMOS 8.1
AMD
disks on the "Data Volume".
AFTER restoring the latest backup (see below), these can be updated by simply MONTSTing from the
latest backup copies - like MONTST AM8000 which will re-syncronize the "System Volume" copies.
If the "Data Volume" partition (usually E:) was restored, then restoring the production system is done.
If this was the most recent backup of the AMOS data, then the whole procedure is done.
If there is no "Data Volume" (it was not on the backup), then create a data volume using the New
Partition Wizard described earlier in this manual.
If necessary, create an AMOS
AMD
pseudo drive using the AM8000 configuration process described in
the
AM-8000 Server Owner’s Manual
. Generally we recommend disks of 4 GB or less so that each will
fit on a DVD-RAM media. However, the choice is yours: Using a large tape drive or the Ghost
compression will allow backing up much larger
AMD
files.