WinDbg: Unable to get verifier list
Moderators: DllAdmin, DLLADMIN ONLY
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@spammenot.yahoo.com> wrote:
> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>> Mark Hobley wrote:
>>> Have you changed something on the system?
>>> Has the harware changed?
>>> Has any software been updated? (Beware of automatic updates)
>>
>> Actually, the only change that I made to the system is that I added a
>> second external USB HD to it. It had a previous USB HD already attached
>> to it before, which is still attached to it, but then I picked up a
>> second one right after Boxing Day. Come to think of it, the first crash
>> occurred just a couple of days after that.
>>
>> I'm willing to entertain the possibility that this new external drive is
>> somehow to blame, but I don't see why. It's just using a standard
>> Microsoft USB Mass Storage driver, and so was the previous external
>> drive. I don't think it could be due to power supply issues as I
>> upgraded the system's power supply early last year to a high-capacity
>> Zalman 650W unit.
>>
>>
>> Yousuf Khan
> I've added the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage newsgroup too, since
> it's looking like this is becoming storage-related.
> First, so to summarize again, I've now had 5 BSOD crashes on one of my
> systems since Christmas. The only change to my system happens to be a
> new external USB hard disk that I got after Christmas. The first crash
> occurred only a few days after attaching this device, on Dec 30th. The
> system previously had a similar external storage enclosure which has had
> no problems. They were similar, however the older drive was a 500GB
> formatted in FAT32, whereas the newer drive is a 1TB formatted in NTFS.
> Secondly, the most recent crash occurred right in the middle of a large
> file transfer from one my internal drives to the new external drive.
Maybe you have some USB disconnects and the NTFS layer gets confused.
As NTFS flushes some data with high priority, I would imagine this can
happen.
> This is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that something about this
> drive is causing the problem. But I've also been analysing the crash
> dumps, and they all implicate either the OS kernel itself, NTOSKRNL, or
> the hal.dll driver, or the NTFS.SYS driver.
> In fact the most recent BSOD was a Stop 0x24 (NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM) right on
> the NTFS.SYS driver (see quote below):
>> BugCheck 24, {1902fe, f78beba0, f78be89c, b83fb504}
>>
>> Probably caused by : Ntfs.sys ( Ntfs!NtfsDeleteCcb+84 )
> So the question is, perhaps USB hard disks formatted to NTFS might not
> respond fast enough to the system's liking, since NTFS usually goes on
> internal hard disks. Is there some way to increase a timeout or anything
> for this drive?
That should not be the cause. You would need to get USB errors
to cause this behaviour and moybe you have some. It is possible
thet the FAT32 driver is more resilient, also because it is far
mor simple and NTFS is a complexity nightmare.
> I always wondered why Microsoft bothered to create a new ExFAT file
> system, to replace FAT32, when NTFS was already around. This might be
> the answer.
Indeed. Also they have ExFAT better locked down with patents
and hope that people will be stupid enough to adopt it anyways.
Arno
--
Arno Wagner, Dr. sc. techn., Dipl. Inform., CISSP -- Email: arno@wagner.name
GnuPG: ID: 1E25338F FP: 0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
----
Cuddly UI's are the manifestation of wishful thinking. -- Dylan Evans
> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>> Mark Hobley wrote:
>>> Have you changed something on the system?
>>> Has the harware changed?
>>> Has any software been updated? (Beware of automatic updates)
>>
>> Actually, the only change that I made to the system is that I added a
>> second external USB HD to it. It had a previous USB HD already attached
>> to it before, which is still attached to it, but then I picked up a
>> second one right after Boxing Day. Come to think of it, the first crash
>> occurred just a couple of days after that.
>>
>> I'm willing to entertain the possibility that this new external drive is
>> somehow to blame, but I don't see why. It's just using a standard
>> Microsoft USB Mass Storage driver, and so was the previous external
>> drive. I don't think it could be due to power supply issues as I
>> upgraded the system's power supply early last year to a high-capacity
>> Zalman 650W unit.
>>
>>
>> Yousuf Khan
> I've added the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage newsgroup too, since
> it's looking like this is becoming storage-related.
> First, so to summarize again, I've now had 5 BSOD crashes on one of my
> systems since Christmas. The only change to my system happens to be a
> new external USB hard disk that I got after Christmas. The first crash
> occurred only a few days after attaching this device, on Dec 30th. The
> system previously had a similar external storage enclosure which has had
> no problems. They were similar, however the older drive was a 500GB
> formatted in FAT32, whereas the newer drive is a 1TB formatted in NTFS.
> Secondly, the most recent crash occurred right in the middle of a large
> file transfer from one my internal drives to the new external drive.
Maybe you have some USB disconnects and the NTFS layer gets confused.
As NTFS flushes some data with high priority, I would imagine this can
happen.
> This is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that something about this
> drive is causing the problem. But I've also been analysing the crash
> dumps, and they all implicate either the OS kernel itself, NTOSKRNL, or
> the hal.dll driver, or the NTFS.SYS driver.
> In fact the most recent BSOD was a Stop 0x24 (NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM) right on
> the NTFS.SYS driver (see quote below):
>> BugCheck 24, {1902fe, f78beba0, f78be89c, b83fb504}
>>
>> Probably caused by : Ntfs.sys ( Ntfs!NtfsDeleteCcb+84 )
> So the question is, perhaps USB hard disks formatted to NTFS might not
> respond fast enough to the system's liking, since NTFS usually goes on
> internal hard disks. Is there some way to increase a timeout or anything
> for this drive?
That should not be the cause. You would need to get USB errors
to cause this behaviour and moybe you have some. It is possible
thet the FAT32 driver is more resilient, also because it is far
mor simple and NTFS is a complexity nightmare.
> I always wondered why Microsoft bothered to create a new ExFAT file
> system, to replace FAT32, when NTFS was already around. This might be
> the answer.
Indeed. Also they have ExFAT better locked down with patents
and hope that people will be stupid enough to adopt it anyways.
Arno
--
Arno Wagner, Dr. sc. techn., Dipl. Inform., CISSP -- Email: arno@wagner.name
GnuPG: ID: 1E25338F FP: 0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
----
Cuddly UI's are the manifestation of wishful thinking. -- Dylan Evans
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage mike <spamme0@go.com> wrote:
> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>> Mark Hobley wrote:
>>>> Have you changed something on the system?
>>>> Has the harware changed?
>>>> Has any software been updated? (Beware of automatic updates)
>>>
>>> Actually, the only change that I made to the system is that I added a
>>> second external USB HD to it. It had a previous USB HD already
>>> attached to it before, which is still attached to it, but then I
>>> picked up a second one right after Boxing Day. Come to think of it,
>>> the first crash occurred just a couple of days after that.
>>>
>>> I'm willing to entertain the possibility that this new external drive
>>> is somehow to blame, but I don't see why. It's just using a standard
>>> Microsoft USB Mass Storage driver, and so was the previous external
>>> drive. I don't think it could be due to power supply issues as I
>>> upgraded the system's power supply early last year to a high-capacity
>>> Zalman 650W unit.
>>>
>>>
>>> Yousuf Khan
>>
>> I've added the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage newsgroup too, since
>> it's looking like this is becoming storage-related.
>>
>> First, so to summarize again, I've now had 5 BSOD crashes on one of my
>> systems since Christmas. The only change to my system happens to be a
>> new external USB hard disk that I got after Christmas. The first crash
>> occurred only a few days after attaching this device, on Dec 30th. The
>> system previously had a similar external storage enclosure which has had
>> no problems. They were similar, however the older drive was a 500GB
>> formatted in FAT32, whereas the newer drive is a 1TB formatted in NTFS.
>>
>> Secondly, the most recent crash occurred right in the middle of a large
>> file transfer from one my internal drives to the new external drive.
>>
>> This is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that something about this
>> drive is causing the problem. But I've also been analysing the crash
>> dumps, and they all implicate either the OS kernel itself, NTOSKRNL, or
>> the hal.dll driver, or the NTFS.SYS driver.
>>
>> In fact the most recent BSOD was a Stop 0x24 (NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM) right on
>> the NTFS.SYS driver (see quote below):
>>
>>> BugCheck 24, {1902fe, f78beba0, f78be89c, b83fb504}
>>>
>>> Probably caused by : Ntfs.sys ( Ntfs!NtfsDeleteCcb+84 )
>>
>> So the question is, perhaps USB hard disks formatted to NTFS might not
>> respond fast enough to the system's liking, since NTFS usually goes on
>> internal hard disks. Is there some way to increase a timeout or anything
>> for this drive?
>>
>> I always wondered why Microsoft bothered to create a new ExFAT file
>> system, to replace FAT32, when NTFS was already around. This might be
>> the answer.
>>
>> Yousuf Khan
> Don't know if any of this is relevant, but...
> I started having file transfer problems when I installed vista.
> Network file transfers to/from XP failed randomly, but only when the file
> being transferred exceeded ~4MB and was in the middle of a multi-file
> transfer. Also seemed to matter which end of the pipe initiated
> the transfer.
> I couldn't make a vista to vista file transfer fail.
> I use totalcommander as my file manager. It has the option to use
> file transfer compatibility mode, whatever that is. Doesn't fail in
> that mode, so I quit looking for the problem.
> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
> front-mounted ports on my dell.
> Hubs are a no-no.
I find this surprising. I have both used long USB cables
(5m) and USB hubs to transfer large volumes of data.
However that was with Linux, it is possible that Windows
vista / 7 has a very low resilience to USB errors. Linux
does up to 4 (I think) retries and bus reset on disk access
errors, whether it is (S)ATA or USB. If vista / 7 fails
the transfer directly after any error, that would explain
the ibserved behaviour. Long cables and USB hubs make
errors more likely.
> If I look in device manager, I see more entries for root hubs
> than for controllers. Don't know exactly what this means, but
> sometimes, moving the usb drive to another port helps.
That means that there are "virual hubs".
> Bus-powered drives are problematic, but I expect your TB drive isn't.
Again, depends. They have a tendency to cause more transfer
errors, but not to unusability, at least not with Linux.
> Power supplies that come with external drives are problematic.
> Might be worth a look at the PS voltages with a scope under load.
I agree. However I did the scope test with one that caused one
specific drive to have problems and I did see nothing with
a 10MHz 10mV/div (elCheapo, I know) scope. I also played around
a bit with one of these PSUs and it seems some have very little
stability margin.
> There have been numerous complaints about recent generations of
> hard drives in the 1TB range.
Oh? I have several Samsungs and WDs and no issues. I don't
remember reading more about these or other 1TB drives. Do
you have specifics?
> NTFS doesn't seem to matter on smaller drives where you can do a
> direct ntfs/fat32 comparison on the same hardware.
So far the advantage I see for NTFS is extended attributes,
i.e. per user permissions. For a single-user machine and
for external drives this is rather irrelevant.
Arno
--
Arno Wagner, Dr. sc. techn., Dipl. Inform., CISSP -- Email: arno@wagner.name
GnuPG: ID: 1E25338F FP: 0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
----
Cuddly UI's are the manifestation of wishful thinking. -- Dylan Evans
> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>> Mark Hobley wrote:
>>>> Have you changed something on the system?
>>>> Has the harware changed?
>>>> Has any software been updated? (Beware of automatic updates)
>>>
>>> Actually, the only change that I made to the system is that I added a
>>> second external USB HD to it. It had a previous USB HD already
>>> attached to it before, which is still attached to it, but then I
>>> picked up a second one right after Boxing Day. Come to think of it,
>>> the first crash occurred just a couple of days after that.
>>>
>>> I'm willing to entertain the possibility that this new external drive
>>> is somehow to blame, but I don't see why. It's just using a standard
>>> Microsoft USB Mass Storage driver, and so was the previous external
>>> drive. I don't think it could be due to power supply issues as I
>>> upgraded the system's power supply early last year to a high-capacity
>>> Zalman 650W unit.
>>>
>>>
>>> Yousuf Khan
>>
>> I've added the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage newsgroup too, since
>> it's looking like this is becoming storage-related.
>>
>> First, so to summarize again, I've now had 5 BSOD crashes on one of my
>> systems since Christmas. The only change to my system happens to be a
>> new external USB hard disk that I got after Christmas. The first crash
>> occurred only a few days after attaching this device, on Dec 30th. The
>> system previously had a similar external storage enclosure which has had
>> no problems. They were similar, however the older drive was a 500GB
>> formatted in FAT32, whereas the newer drive is a 1TB formatted in NTFS.
>>
>> Secondly, the most recent crash occurred right in the middle of a large
>> file transfer from one my internal drives to the new external drive.
>>
>> This is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that something about this
>> drive is causing the problem. But I've also been analysing the crash
>> dumps, and they all implicate either the OS kernel itself, NTOSKRNL, or
>> the hal.dll driver, or the NTFS.SYS driver.
>>
>> In fact the most recent BSOD was a Stop 0x24 (NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM) right on
>> the NTFS.SYS driver (see quote below):
>>
>>> BugCheck 24, {1902fe, f78beba0, f78be89c, b83fb504}
>>>
>>> Probably caused by : Ntfs.sys ( Ntfs!NtfsDeleteCcb+84 )
>>
>> So the question is, perhaps USB hard disks formatted to NTFS might not
>> respond fast enough to the system's liking, since NTFS usually goes on
>> internal hard disks. Is there some way to increase a timeout or anything
>> for this drive?
>>
>> I always wondered why Microsoft bothered to create a new ExFAT file
>> system, to replace FAT32, when NTFS was already around. This might be
>> the answer.
>>
>> Yousuf Khan
> Don't know if any of this is relevant, but...
> I started having file transfer problems when I installed vista.
> Network file transfers to/from XP failed randomly, but only when the file
> being transferred exceeded ~4MB and was in the middle of a multi-file
> transfer. Also seemed to matter which end of the pipe initiated
> the transfer.
> I couldn't make a vista to vista file transfer fail.
> I use totalcommander as my file manager. It has the option to use
> file transfer compatibility mode, whatever that is. Doesn't fail in
> that mode, so I quit looking for the problem.
> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
> front-mounted ports on my dell.
> Hubs are a no-no.
I find this surprising. I have both used long USB cables
(5m) and USB hubs to transfer large volumes of data.
However that was with Linux, it is possible that Windows
vista / 7 has a very low resilience to USB errors. Linux
does up to 4 (I think) retries and bus reset on disk access
errors, whether it is (S)ATA or USB. If vista / 7 fails
the transfer directly after any error, that would explain
the ibserved behaviour. Long cables and USB hubs make
errors more likely.
> If I look in device manager, I see more entries for root hubs
> than for controllers. Don't know exactly what this means, but
> sometimes, moving the usb drive to another port helps.
That means that there are "virual hubs".
> Bus-powered drives are problematic, but I expect your TB drive isn't.
Again, depends. They have a tendency to cause more transfer
errors, but not to unusability, at least not with Linux.
> Power supplies that come with external drives are problematic.
> Might be worth a look at the PS voltages with a scope under load.
I agree. However I did the scope test with one that caused one
specific drive to have problems and I did see nothing with
a 10MHz 10mV/div (elCheapo, I know) scope. I also played around
a bit with one of these PSUs and it seems some have very little
stability margin.
> There have been numerous complaints about recent generations of
> hard drives in the 1TB range.
Oh? I have several Samsungs and WDs and no issues. I don't
remember reading more about these or other 1TB drives. Do
you have specifics?
> NTFS doesn't seem to matter on smaller drives where you can do a
> direct ntfs/fat32 comparison on the same hardware.
So far the advantage I see for NTFS is extended attributes,
i.e. per user permissions. For a single-user machine and
for external drives this is rather irrelevant.
Arno
--
Arno Wagner, Dr. sc. techn., Dipl. Inform., CISSP -- Email: arno@wagner.name
GnuPG: ID: 1E25338F FP: 0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
----
Cuddly UI's are the manifestation of wishful thinking. -- Dylan Evans
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
Arno wrote:
> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage mike <spamme0@go.com> wrote:
>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>>> Mark Hobley wrote:
>>>>> Have you changed something on the system?
>>>>> Has the harware changed?
>>>>> Has any software been updated? (Beware of automatic updates)
>>>> Actually, the only change that I made to the system is that I added a
>>>> second external USB HD to it. It had a previous USB HD already
>>>> attached to it before, which is still attached to it, but then I
>>>> picked up a second one right after Boxing Day. Come to think of it,
>>>> the first crash occurred just a couple of days after that.
>>>>
>>>> I'm willing to entertain the possibility that this new external drive
>>>> is somehow to blame, but I don't see why. It's just using a standard
>>>> Microsoft USB Mass Storage driver, and so was the previous external
>>>> drive. I don't think it could be due to power supply issues as I
>>>> upgraded the system's power supply early last year to a high-capacity
>>>> Zalman 650W unit.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Yousuf Khan
>>> I've added the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage newsgroup too, since
>>> it's looking like this is becoming storage-related.
>>>
>>> First, so to summarize again, I've now had 5 BSOD crashes on one of my
>>> systems since Christmas. The only change to my system happens to be a
>>> new external USB hard disk that I got after Christmas. The first crash
>>> occurred only a few days after attaching this device, on Dec 30th. The
>>> system previously had a similar external storage enclosure which has had
>>> no problems. They were similar, however the older drive was a 500GB
>>> formatted in FAT32, whereas the newer drive is a 1TB formatted in NTFS.
>>>
>>> Secondly, the most recent crash occurred right in the middle of a large
>>> file transfer from one my internal drives to the new external drive.
>>>
>>> This is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that something about this
>>> drive is causing the problem. But I've also been analysing the crash
>>> dumps, and they all implicate either the OS kernel itself, NTOSKRNL, or
>>> the hal.dll driver, or the NTFS.SYS driver.
>>>
>>> In fact the most recent BSOD was a Stop 0x24 (NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM) right on
>>> the NTFS.SYS driver (see quote below):
>>>
>>>> BugCheck 24, {1902fe, f78beba0, f78be89c, b83fb504}
>>>>
>>>> Probably caused by : Ntfs.sys ( Ntfs!NtfsDeleteCcb+84 )
>>> So the question is, perhaps USB hard disks formatted to NTFS might not
>>> respond fast enough to the system's liking, since NTFS usually goes on
>>> internal hard disks. Is there some way to increase a timeout or anything
>>> for this drive?
>>>
>>> I always wondered why Microsoft bothered to create a new ExFAT file
>>> system, to replace FAT32, when NTFS was already around. This might be
>>> the answer.
>>>
>>> Yousuf Khan
>
>> Don't know if any of this is relevant, but...
>> I started having file transfer problems when I installed vista.
>> Network file transfers to/from XP failed randomly, but only when the file
>> being transferred exceeded ~4MB and was in the middle of a multi-file
>> transfer. Also seemed to matter which end of the pipe initiated
>> the transfer.
>> I couldn't make a vista to vista file transfer fail.
>
>> I use totalcommander as my file manager. It has the option to use
>> file transfer compatibility mode, whatever that is. Doesn't fail in
>> that mode, so I quit looking for the problem.
>
>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
>> front-mounted ports on my dell.
>> Hubs are a no-no.
>
> I find this surprising. I have both used long USB cables
> (5m) and USB hubs to transfer large volumes of data.
> However that was with Linux, it is possible that Windows
> vista / 7 has a very low resilience to USB errors. Linux
> does up to 4 (I think) retries and bus reset on disk access
> errors, whether it is (S)ATA or USB. If vista / 7 fails
> the transfer directly after any error, that would explain
> the ibserved behaviour. Long cables and USB hubs make
> errors more likely.
>
>> If I look in device manager, I see more entries for root hubs
>> than for controllers. Don't know exactly what this means, but
>> sometimes, moving the usb drive to another port helps.
>
> That means that there are "virual hubs".
>
>> Bus-powered drives are problematic, but I expect your TB drive isn't.
>
> Again, depends. They have a tendency to cause more transfer
> errors, but not to unusability, at least not with Linux.
>
>> Power supplies that come with external drives are problematic.
>> Might be worth a look at the PS voltages with a scope under load.
>
> I agree. However I did the scope test with one that caused one
> specific drive to have problems and I did see nothing with
> a 10MHz 10mV/div (elCheapo, I know) scope. I also played around
> a bit with one of these PSUs and it seems some have very little
> stability margin.
>
>> There have been numerous complaints about recent generations of
>> hard drives in the 1TB range.
>
> Oh? I have several Samsungs and WDs and no issues. I don't
> remember reading more about these or other 1TB drives. Do
> you have specifics?
Don't know how you missed it. Back around September,
the press was so bad on Seagate .11 series drives in the 1-1.5TB range
that they were practically giving them away. They had a program
for free data recovery if you sent in your permanently-locked-up drive.
Not clear how many
firmware updates they had. Seems that people were not satisfied
that the firmware fix did anything other than throttle the performance.
Interesting coincidence that they also changed the warranty from 5-years
to, I think, three.
I stayed away from that whole mess.
>
>> NTFS doesn't seem to matter on smaller drives where you can do a
>> direct ntfs/fat32 comparison on the same hardware.
>
> So far the advantage I see for NTFS is extended attributes,
> i.e. per user permissions. For a single-user machine and
> for external drives this is rather irrelevant.
Doesn't fat32 have a 4GB file size limit? Big problem if
you store DVD images or large backup files on your external drive.
>
> Arno
> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage mike <spamme0@go.com> wrote:
>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>>> Mark Hobley wrote:
>>>>> Have you changed something on the system?
>>>>> Has the harware changed?
>>>>> Has any software been updated? (Beware of automatic updates)
>>>> Actually, the only change that I made to the system is that I added a
>>>> second external USB HD to it. It had a previous USB HD already
>>>> attached to it before, which is still attached to it, but then I
>>>> picked up a second one right after Boxing Day. Come to think of it,
>>>> the first crash occurred just a couple of days after that.
>>>>
>>>> I'm willing to entertain the possibility that this new external drive
>>>> is somehow to blame, but I don't see why. It's just using a standard
>>>> Microsoft USB Mass Storage driver, and so was the previous external
>>>> drive. I don't think it could be due to power supply issues as I
>>>> upgraded the system's power supply early last year to a high-capacity
>>>> Zalman 650W unit.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Yousuf Khan
>>> I've added the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage newsgroup too, since
>>> it's looking like this is becoming storage-related.
>>>
>>> First, so to summarize again, I've now had 5 BSOD crashes on one of my
>>> systems since Christmas. The only change to my system happens to be a
>>> new external USB hard disk that I got after Christmas. The first crash
>>> occurred only a few days after attaching this device, on Dec 30th. The
>>> system previously had a similar external storage enclosure which has had
>>> no problems. They were similar, however the older drive was a 500GB
>>> formatted in FAT32, whereas the newer drive is a 1TB formatted in NTFS.
>>>
>>> Secondly, the most recent crash occurred right in the middle of a large
>>> file transfer from one my internal drives to the new external drive.
>>>
>>> This is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that something about this
>>> drive is causing the problem. But I've also been analysing the crash
>>> dumps, and they all implicate either the OS kernel itself, NTOSKRNL, or
>>> the hal.dll driver, or the NTFS.SYS driver.
>>>
>>> In fact the most recent BSOD was a Stop 0x24 (NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM) right on
>>> the NTFS.SYS driver (see quote below):
>>>
>>>> BugCheck 24, {1902fe, f78beba0, f78be89c, b83fb504}
>>>>
>>>> Probably caused by : Ntfs.sys ( Ntfs!NtfsDeleteCcb+84 )
>>> So the question is, perhaps USB hard disks formatted to NTFS might not
>>> respond fast enough to the system's liking, since NTFS usually goes on
>>> internal hard disks. Is there some way to increase a timeout or anything
>>> for this drive?
>>>
>>> I always wondered why Microsoft bothered to create a new ExFAT file
>>> system, to replace FAT32, when NTFS was already around. This might be
>>> the answer.
>>>
>>> Yousuf Khan
>
>> Don't know if any of this is relevant, but...
>> I started having file transfer problems when I installed vista.
>> Network file transfers to/from XP failed randomly, but only when the file
>> being transferred exceeded ~4MB and was in the middle of a multi-file
>> transfer. Also seemed to matter which end of the pipe initiated
>> the transfer.
>> I couldn't make a vista to vista file transfer fail.
>
>> I use totalcommander as my file manager. It has the option to use
>> file transfer compatibility mode, whatever that is. Doesn't fail in
>> that mode, so I quit looking for the problem.
>
>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
>> front-mounted ports on my dell.
>> Hubs are a no-no.
>
> I find this surprising. I have both used long USB cables
> (5m) and USB hubs to transfer large volumes of data.
> However that was with Linux, it is possible that Windows
> vista / 7 has a very low resilience to USB errors. Linux
> does up to 4 (I think) retries and bus reset on disk access
> errors, whether it is (S)ATA or USB. If vista / 7 fails
> the transfer directly after any error, that would explain
> the ibserved behaviour. Long cables and USB hubs make
> errors more likely.
>
>> If I look in device manager, I see more entries for root hubs
>> than for controllers. Don't know exactly what this means, but
>> sometimes, moving the usb drive to another port helps.
>
> That means that there are "virual hubs".
>
>> Bus-powered drives are problematic, but I expect your TB drive isn't.
>
> Again, depends. They have a tendency to cause more transfer
> errors, but not to unusability, at least not with Linux.
>
>> Power supplies that come with external drives are problematic.
>> Might be worth a look at the PS voltages with a scope under load.
>
> I agree. However I did the scope test with one that caused one
> specific drive to have problems and I did see nothing with
> a 10MHz 10mV/div (elCheapo, I know) scope. I also played around
> a bit with one of these PSUs and it seems some have very little
> stability margin.
>
>> There have been numerous complaints about recent generations of
>> hard drives in the 1TB range.
>
> Oh? I have several Samsungs and WDs and no issues. I don't
> remember reading more about these or other 1TB drives. Do
> you have specifics?
Don't know how you missed it. Back around September,
the press was so bad on Seagate .11 series drives in the 1-1.5TB range
that they were practically giving them away. They had a program
for free data recovery if you sent in your permanently-locked-up drive.
Not clear how many
firmware updates they had. Seems that people were not satisfied
that the firmware fix did anything other than throttle the performance.
Interesting coincidence that they also changed the warranty from 5-years
to, I think, three.
I stayed away from that whole mess.
>
>> NTFS doesn't seem to matter on smaller drives where you can do a
>> direct ntfs/fat32 comparison on the same hardware.
>
> So far the advantage I see for NTFS is extended attributes,
> i.e. per user permissions. For a single-user machine and
> for external drives this is rather irrelevant.
Doesn't fat32 have a 4GB file size limit? Big problem if
you store DVD images or large backup files on your external drive.
>
> Arno
-
- Posts: 1
- Joined: 12 Jan 2010, 00:00
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
On Jan 12, 10:52
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
mike wrote:
> Arno wrote:
>> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage mike <spamme0@go.com> wrote:
>>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>>>> Mark Hobley wrote:
>>>>>> Have you changed something on the system?
>>>>>> Has the harware changed?
>>>>>> Has any software been updated? (Beware of automatic updates)
>>>>> Actually, the only change that I made to the system is that I
>>>>> added a second external USB HD to it. It had a previous USB HD
>>>>> already attached to it before, which is still attached to it, but
>>>>> then I picked up a second one right after Boxing Day. Come to
>>>>> think of it, the first crash occurred just a couple of days after
>>>>> that. I'm willing to entertain the possibility that this new external
>>>>> drive is somehow to blame, but I don't see why. It's just using a
>>>>> standard Microsoft USB Mass Storage driver, and so was the
>>>>> previous external drive. I don't think it could be due to power
>>>>> supply issues as I upgraded the system's power supply early last
>>>>> year to a high-capacity Zalman 650W unit.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Yousuf Khan
>>>> I've added the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage newsgroup too,
>>>> since it's looking like this is becoming storage-related.
>>>>
>>>> First, so to summarize again, I've now had 5 BSOD crashes on one
>>>> of my systems since Christmas. The only change to my system
>>>> happens to be a new external USB hard disk that I got after
>>>> Christmas. The first crash occurred only a few days after
>>>> attaching this device, on Dec 30th. The system previously had a
>>>> similar external storage enclosure which has had no problems. They
>>>> were similar, however the older drive was a 500GB formatted in
>>>> FAT32, whereas the newer drive is a 1TB formatted in NTFS. Secondly, the most recent crash occurred right in the
>>>> middle of a
>>>> large file transfer from one my internal drives to the new
>>>> external drive. This is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that something about
>>>> this drive is causing the problem. But I've also been analysing
>>>> the crash dumps, and they all implicate either the OS kernel
>>>> itself, NTOSKRNL, or the hal.dll driver, or the NTFS.SYS driver.
>>>>
>>>> In fact the most recent BSOD was a Stop 0x24 (NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM)
>>>> right on the NTFS.SYS driver (see quote below):
>>>>
>>>>> BugCheck 24, {1902fe, f78beba0, f78be89c, b83fb504}
>>>>>
>>>>> Probably caused by : Ntfs.sys ( Ntfs!NtfsDeleteCcb+84 )
>>>> So the question is, perhaps USB hard disks formatted to NTFS might
>>>> not respond fast enough to the system's liking, since NTFS usually
>>>> goes on internal hard disks. Is there some way to increase a
>>>> timeout or anything for this drive?
>>>>
>>>> I always wondered why Microsoft bothered to create a new ExFAT file
>>>> system, to replace FAT32, when NTFS was already around. This might
>>>> be the answer.
>>>>
>>>> Yousuf Khan
>>
>>> Don't know if any of this is relevant, but...
>>> I started having file transfer problems when I installed vista.
>>> Network file transfers to/from XP failed randomly, but only when
>>> the file being transferred exceeded ~4MB and was in the middle of a
>>> multi-file transfer. Also seemed to matter which end of the pipe
>>> initiated the transfer.
>>> I couldn't make a vista to vista file transfer fail.
>>
>>> I use totalcommander as my file manager. It has the option to use
>>> file transfer compatibility mode, whatever that is. Doesn't fail in
>>> that mode, so I quit looking for the problem.
>>
>>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using
>>> the front-mounted ports on my dell.
>>> Hubs are a no-no.
>>
>> I find this surprising. I have both used long USB cables
>> (5m) and USB hubs to transfer large volumes of data.
>> However that was with Linux, it is possible that Windows
>> vista / 7 has a very low resilience to USB errors. Linux
>> does up to 4 (I think) retries and bus reset on disk access
>> errors, whether it is (S)ATA or USB. If vista / 7 fails
>> the transfer directly after any error, that would explain
>> the ibserved behaviour. Long cables and USB hubs make
>> errors more likely.
>>
>>> If I look in device manager, I see more entries for root hubs
>>> than for controllers. Don't know exactly what this means, but
>>> sometimes, moving the usb drive to another port helps.
>>
>> That means that there are "virual hubs".
>>
>>> Bus-powered drives are problematic, but I expect your TB drive
>>> isn't.
>>
>> Again, depends. They have a tendency to cause more transfer
>> errors, but not to unusability, at least not with Linux.
>>
>>> Power supplies that come with external drives are problematic.
>>> Might be worth a look at the PS voltages with a scope under load.
>>
>> I agree. However I did the scope test with one that caused one
>> specific drive to have problems and I did see nothing with
>> a 10MHz 10mV/div (elCheapo, I know) scope. I also played around
>> a bit with one of these PSUs and it seems some have very little
>> stability margin.
>>
>>> There have been numerous complaints about recent generations of
>>> hard drives in the 1TB range.
>>
>> Oh? I have several Samsungs and WDs and no issues. I don't
>> remember reading more about these or other 1TB drives. Do
>> you have specifics?
>
> Don't know how you missed it. Back around September,
> the press was so bad on Seagate .11 series drives in the 1-1.5TB range
> that they were practically giving them away. They had a program
> for free data recovery if you sent in your permanently-locked-up
> drive. Not clear how many
> firmware updates they had. Seems that people were not satisfied
> that the firmware fix did anything other than throttle the
> performance. Interesting coincidence that they also changed the
> warranty from 5-years to, I think, three.
> I stayed away from that whole mess.
>>
>>> NTFS doesn't seem to matter on smaller drives where you can do a
>>> direct ntfs/fat32 comparison on the same hardware.
>>
>> So far the advantage I see for NTFS is extended attributes,
>> i.e. per user permissions. For a single-user machine and
>> for external drives this is rather irrelevant.
> Doesn't fat32 have a 4GB file size limit?
Yes.
> Big problem if you store DVD images
And files created on a PVR etc.
> or large backup files on your external drive.
Those arent generally a problem, because the backup apps all allow for that limitation.
> Arno wrote:
>> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage mike <spamme0@go.com> wrote:
>>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>>>> Mark Hobley wrote:
>>>>>> Have you changed something on the system?
>>>>>> Has the harware changed?
>>>>>> Has any software been updated? (Beware of automatic updates)
>>>>> Actually, the only change that I made to the system is that I
>>>>> added a second external USB HD to it. It had a previous USB HD
>>>>> already attached to it before, which is still attached to it, but
>>>>> then I picked up a second one right after Boxing Day. Come to
>>>>> think of it, the first crash occurred just a couple of days after
>>>>> that. I'm willing to entertain the possibility that this new external
>>>>> drive is somehow to blame, but I don't see why. It's just using a
>>>>> standard Microsoft USB Mass Storage driver, and so was the
>>>>> previous external drive. I don't think it could be due to power
>>>>> supply issues as I upgraded the system's power supply early last
>>>>> year to a high-capacity Zalman 650W unit.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Yousuf Khan
>>>> I've added the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage newsgroup too,
>>>> since it's looking like this is becoming storage-related.
>>>>
>>>> First, so to summarize again, I've now had 5 BSOD crashes on one
>>>> of my systems since Christmas. The only change to my system
>>>> happens to be a new external USB hard disk that I got after
>>>> Christmas. The first crash occurred only a few days after
>>>> attaching this device, on Dec 30th. The system previously had a
>>>> similar external storage enclosure which has had no problems. They
>>>> were similar, however the older drive was a 500GB formatted in
>>>> FAT32, whereas the newer drive is a 1TB formatted in NTFS. Secondly, the most recent crash occurred right in the
>>>> middle of a
>>>> large file transfer from one my internal drives to the new
>>>> external drive. This is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that something about
>>>> this drive is causing the problem. But I've also been analysing
>>>> the crash dumps, and they all implicate either the OS kernel
>>>> itself, NTOSKRNL, or the hal.dll driver, or the NTFS.SYS driver.
>>>>
>>>> In fact the most recent BSOD was a Stop 0x24 (NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM)
>>>> right on the NTFS.SYS driver (see quote below):
>>>>
>>>>> BugCheck 24, {1902fe, f78beba0, f78be89c, b83fb504}
>>>>>
>>>>> Probably caused by : Ntfs.sys ( Ntfs!NtfsDeleteCcb+84 )
>>>> So the question is, perhaps USB hard disks formatted to NTFS might
>>>> not respond fast enough to the system's liking, since NTFS usually
>>>> goes on internal hard disks. Is there some way to increase a
>>>> timeout or anything for this drive?
>>>>
>>>> I always wondered why Microsoft bothered to create a new ExFAT file
>>>> system, to replace FAT32, when NTFS was already around. This might
>>>> be the answer.
>>>>
>>>> Yousuf Khan
>>
>>> Don't know if any of this is relevant, but...
>>> I started having file transfer problems when I installed vista.
>>> Network file transfers to/from XP failed randomly, but only when
>>> the file being transferred exceeded ~4MB and was in the middle of a
>>> multi-file transfer. Also seemed to matter which end of the pipe
>>> initiated the transfer.
>>> I couldn't make a vista to vista file transfer fail.
>>
>>> I use totalcommander as my file manager. It has the option to use
>>> file transfer compatibility mode, whatever that is. Doesn't fail in
>>> that mode, so I quit looking for the problem.
>>
>>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using
>>> the front-mounted ports on my dell.
>>> Hubs are a no-no.
>>
>> I find this surprising. I have both used long USB cables
>> (5m) and USB hubs to transfer large volumes of data.
>> However that was with Linux, it is possible that Windows
>> vista / 7 has a very low resilience to USB errors. Linux
>> does up to 4 (I think) retries and bus reset on disk access
>> errors, whether it is (S)ATA or USB. If vista / 7 fails
>> the transfer directly after any error, that would explain
>> the ibserved behaviour. Long cables and USB hubs make
>> errors more likely.
>>
>>> If I look in device manager, I see more entries for root hubs
>>> than for controllers. Don't know exactly what this means, but
>>> sometimes, moving the usb drive to another port helps.
>>
>> That means that there are "virual hubs".
>>
>>> Bus-powered drives are problematic, but I expect your TB drive
>>> isn't.
>>
>> Again, depends. They have a tendency to cause more transfer
>> errors, but not to unusability, at least not with Linux.
>>
>>> Power supplies that come with external drives are problematic.
>>> Might be worth a look at the PS voltages with a scope under load.
>>
>> I agree. However I did the scope test with one that caused one
>> specific drive to have problems and I did see nothing with
>> a 10MHz 10mV/div (elCheapo, I know) scope. I also played around
>> a bit with one of these PSUs and it seems some have very little
>> stability margin.
>>
>>> There have been numerous complaints about recent generations of
>>> hard drives in the 1TB range.
>>
>> Oh? I have several Samsungs and WDs and no issues. I don't
>> remember reading more about these or other 1TB drives. Do
>> you have specifics?
>
> Don't know how you missed it. Back around September,
> the press was so bad on Seagate .11 series drives in the 1-1.5TB range
> that they were practically giving them away. They had a program
> for free data recovery if you sent in your permanently-locked-up
> drive. Not clear how many
> firmware updates they had. Seems that people were not satisfied
> that the firmware fix did anything other than throttle the
> performance. Interesting coincidence that they also changed the
> warranty from 5-years to, I think, three.
> I stayed away from that whole mess.
>>
>>> NTFS doesn't seem to matter on smaller drives where you can do a
>>> direct ntfs/fat32 comparison on the same hardware.
>>
>> So far the advantage I see for NTFS is extended attributes,
>> i.e. per user permissions. For a single-user machine and
>> for external drives this is rather irrelevant.
> Doesn't fat32 have a 4GB file size limit?
Yes.
> Big problem if you store DVD images
And files created on a PVR etc.
> or large backup files on your external drive.
Those arent generally a problem, because the backup apps all allow for that limitation.
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
Rod Speed wrote:
> mike wrote:
>> Arno wrote:
>>> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage mike <spamme0@go.com> wrote:
>>>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>>>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>>>>> Mark Hobley wrote:
>>>>>>> Have you changed something on the system?
>>>>>>> Has the harware changed?
>>>>>>> Has any software been updated? (Beware of automatic updates)
>>>>>> Actually, the only change that I made to the system is that I
>>>>>> added a second external USB HD to it. It had a previous USB HD
>>>>>> already attached to it before, which is still attached to it, but
>>>>>> then I picked up a second one right after Boxing Day. Come to
>>>>>> think of it, the first crash occurred just a couple of days after
>>>>>> that. I'm willing to entertain the possibility that this new external
>>>>>> drive is somehow to blame, but I don't see why. It's just using a
>>>>>> standard Microsoft USB Mass Storage driver, and so was the
>>>>>> previous external drive. I don't think it could be due to power
>>>>>> supply issues as I upgraded the system's power supply early last
>>>>>> year to a high-capacity Zalman 650W unit.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Yousuf Khan
>>>>> I've added the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage newsgroup too,
>>>>> since it's looking like this is becoming storage-related.
>>>>>
>>>>> First, so to summarize again, I've now had 5 BSOD crashes on one
>>>>> of my systems since Christmas. The only change to my system
>>>>> happens to be a new external USB hard disk that I got after
>>>>> Christmas. The first crash occurred only a few days after
>>>>> attaching this device, on Dec 30th. The system previously had a
>>>>> similar external storage enclosure which has had no problems. They
>>>>> were similar, however the older drive was a 500GB formatted in
>>>>> FAT32, whereas the newer drive is a 1TB formatted in NTFS. Secondly, the most recent crash occurred right in the
>>>>> middle of a
>>>>> large file transfer from one my internal drives to the new
>>>>> external drive. This is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that something about
>>>>> this drive is causing the problem. But I've also been analysing
>>>>> the crash dumps, and they all implicate either the OS kernel
>>>>> itself, NTOSKRNL, or the hal.dll driver, or the NTFS.SYS driver.
>>>>>
>>>>> In fact the most recent BSOD was a Stop 0x24 (NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM)
>>>>> right on the NTFS.SYS driver (see quote below):
>>>>>
>>>>>> BugCheck 24, {1902fe, f78beba0, f78be89c, b83fb504}
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Probably caused by : Ntfs.sys ( Ntfs!NtfsDeleteCcb+84 )
>>>>> So the question is, perhaps USB hard disks formatted to NTFS might
>>>>> not respond fast enough to the system's liking, since NTFS usually
>>>>> goes on internal hard disks. Is there some way to increase a
>>>>> timeout or anything for this drive?
>>>>>
>>>>> I always wondered why Microsoft bothered to create a new ExFAT file
>>>>> system, to replace FAT32, when NTFS was already around. This might
>>>>> be the answer.
>>>>>
>>>>> Yousuf Khan
>>>> Don't know if any of this is relevant, but...
>>>> I started having file transfer problems when I installed vista.
>>>> Network file transfers to/from XP failed randomly, but only when
>>>> the file being transferred exceeded ~4MB and was in the middle of a
>>>> multi-file transfer. Also seemed to matter which end of the pipe
>>>> initiated the transfer.
>>>> I couldn't make a vista to vista file transfer fail.
>>>> I use totalcommander as my file manager. It has the option to use
>>>> file transfer compatibility mode, whatever that is. Doesn't fail in
>>>> that mode, so I quit looking for the problem.
>>>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using
>>>> the front-mounted ports on my dell.
>>>> Hubs are a no-no.
>>> I find this surprising. I have both used long USB cables
>>> (5m) and USB hubs to transfer large volumes of data.
>>> However that was with Linux, it is possible that Windows
>>> vista / 7 has a very low resilience to USB errors. Linux
>>> does up to 4 (I think) retries and bus reset on disk access
>>> errors, whether it is (S)ATA or USB. If vista / 7 fails
>>> the transfer directly after any error, that would explain
>>> the ibserved behaviour. Long cables and USB hubs make
>>> errors more likely.
>>>
>>>> If I look in device manager, I see more entries for root hubs
>>>> than for controllers. Don't know exactly what this means, but
>>>> sometimes, moving the usb drive to another port helps.
>>> That means that there are "virual hubs".
>>>
>>>> Bus-powered drives are problematic, but I expect your TB drive
>>>> isn't.
>>> Again, depends. They have a tendency to cause more transfer
>>> errors, but not to unusability, at least not with Linux.
>>>
>>>> Power supplies that come with external drives are problematic.
>>>> Might be worth a look at the PS voltages with a scope under load.
>>> I agree. However I did the scope test with one that caused one
>>> specific drive to have problems and I did see nothing with
>>> a 10MHz 10mV/div (elCheapo, I know) scope. I also played around
>>> a bit with one of these PSUs and it seems some have very little
>>> stability margin.
>>>
>>>> There have been numerous complaints about recent generations of
>>>> hard drives in the 1TB range.
>>> Oh? I have several Samsungs and WDs and no issues. I don't
>>> remember reading more about these or other 1TB drives. Do
>>> you have specifics?
>> Don't know how you missed it. Back around September,
>> the press was so bad on Seagate .11 series drives in the 1-1.5TB range
>> that they were practically giving them away. They had a program
>> for free data recovery if you sent in your permanently-locked-up
>> drive. Not clear how many
>> firmware updates they had. Seems that people were not satisfied
>> that the firmware fix did anything other than throttle the
>> performance. Interesting coincidence that they also changed the
>> warranty from 5-years to, I think, three.
>> I stayed away from that whole mess.
>>>> NTFS doesn't seem to matter on smaller drives where you can do a
>>>> direct ntfs/fat32 comparison on the same hardware.
>>> So far the advantage I see for NTFS is extended attributes,
>>> i.e. per user permissions. For a single-user machine and
>>> for external drives this is rather irrelevant.
>
>> Doesn't fat32 have a 4GB file size limit?
>
> Yes.
>
>> Big problem if you store DVD images
>
> And files created on a PVR etc.
>
>> or large backup files on your external drive.
>
> Those arent generally a problem, because the backup apps all allow for that limitation.
>
>
Yes, but if you made the backup to an ntfs drive and tried to copy it to
the external drive, you have a problem. Allowing for a limitation works
great if you know about that limitation beforehand and plan for it.
> mike wrote:
>> Arno wrote:
>>> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage mike <spamme0@go.com> wrote:
>>>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>>>> Yousuf Khan wrote:
>>>>>> Mark Hobley wrote:
>>>>>>> Have you changed something on the system?
>>>>>>> Has the harware changed?
>>>>>>> Has any software been updated? (Beware of automatic updates)
>>>>>> Actually, the only change that I made to the system is that I
>>>>>> added a second external USB HD to it. It had a previous USB HD
>>>>>> already attached to it before, which is still attached to it, but
>>>>>> then I picked up a second one right after Boxing Day. Come to
>>>>>> think of it, the first crash occurred just a couple of days after
>>>>>> that. I'm willing to entertain the possibility that this new external
>>>>>> drive is somehow to blame, but I don't see why. It's just using a
>>>>>> standard Microsoft USB Mass Storage driver, and so was the
>>>>>> previous external drive. I don't think it could be due to power
>>>>>> supply issues as I upgraded the system's power supply early last
>>>>>> year to a high-capacity Zalman 650W unit.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Yousuf Khan
>>>>> I've added the comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage newsgroup too,
>>>>> since it's looking like this is becoming storage-related.
>>>>>
>>>>> First, so to summarize again, I've now had 5 BSOD crashes on one
>>>>> of my systems since Christmas. The only change to my system
>>>>> happens to be a new external USB hard disk that I got after
>>>>> Christmas. The first crash occurred only a few days after
>>>>> attaching this device, on Dec 30th. The system previously had a
>>>>> similar external storage enclosure which has had no problems. They
>>>>> were similar, however the older drive was a 500GB formatted in
>>>>> FAT32, whereas the newer drive is a 1TB formatted in NTFS. Secondly, the most recent crash occurred right in the
>>>>> middle of a
>>>>> large file transfer from one my internal drives to the new
>>>>> external drive. This is pretty strong circumstantial evidence that something about
>>>>> this drive is causing the problem. But I've also been analysing
>>>>> the crash dumps, and they all implicate either the OS kernel
>>>>> itself, NTOSKRNL, or the hal.dll driver, or the NTFS.SYS driver.
>>>>>
>>>>> In fact the most recent BSOD was a Stop 0x24 (NTFS_FILE_SYSTEM)
>>>>> right on the NTFS.SYS driver (see quote below):
>>>>>
>>>>>> BugCheck 24, {1902fe, f78beba0, f78be89c, b83fb504}
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Probably caused by : Ntfs.sys ( Ntfs!NtfsDeleteCcb+84 )
>>>>> So the question is, perhaps USB hard disks formatted to NTFS might
>>>>> not respond fast enough to the system's liking, since NTFS usually
>>>>> goes on internal hard disks. Is there some way to increase a
>>>>> timeout or anything for this drive?
>>>>>
>>>>> I always wondered why Microsoft bothered to create a new ExFAT file
>>>>> system, to replace FAT32, when NTFS was already around. This might
>>>>> be the answer.
>>>>>
>>>>> Yousuf Khan
>>>> Don't know if any of this is relevant, but...
>>>> I started having file transfer problems when I installed vista.
>>>> Network file transfers to/from XP failed randomly, but only when
>>>> the file being transferred exceeded ~4MB and was in the middle of a
>>>> multi-file transfer. Also seemed to matter which end of the pipe
>>>> initiated the transfer.
>>>> I couldn't make a vista to vista file transfer fail.
>>>> I use totalcommander as my file manager. It has the option to use
>>>> file transfer compatibility mode, whatever that is. Doesn't fail in
>>>> that mode, so I quit looking for the problem.
>>>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using
>>>> the front-mounted ports on my dell.
>>>> Hubs are a no-no.
>>> I find this surprising. I have both used long USB cables
>>> (5m) and USB hubs to transfer large volumes of data.
>>> However that was with Linux, it is possible that Windows
>>> vista / 7 has a very low resilience to USB errors. Linux
>>> does up to 4 (I think) retries and bus reset on disk access
>>> errors, whether it is (S)ATA or USB. If vista / 7 fails
>>> the transfer directly after any error, that would explain
>>> the ibserved behaviour. Long cables and USB hubs make
>>> errors more likely.
>>>
>>>> If I look in device manager, I see more entries for root hubs
>>>> than for controllers. Don't know exactly what this means, but
>>>> sometimes, moving the usb drive to another port helps.
>>> That means that there are "virual hubs".
>>>
>>>> Bus-powered drives are problematic, but I expect your TB drive
>>>> isn't.
>>> Again, depends. They have a tendency to cause more transfer
>>> errors, but not to unusability, at least not with Linux.
>>>
>>>> Power supplies that come with external drives are problematic.
>>>> Might be worth a look at the PS voltages with a scope under load.
>>> I agree. However I did the scope test with one that caused one
>>> specific drive to have problems and I did see nothing with
>>> a 10MHz 10mV/div (elCheapo, I know) scope. I also played around
>>> a bit with one of these PSUs and it seems some have very little
>>> stability margin.
>>>
>>>> There have been numerous complaints about recent generations of
>>>> hard drives in the 1TB range.
>>> Oh? I have several Samsungs and WDs and no issues. I don't
>>> remember reading more about these or other 1TB drives. Do
>>> you have specifics?
>> Don't know how you missed it. Back around September,
>> the press was so bad on Seagate .11 series drives in the 1-1.5TB range
>> that they were practically giving them away. They had a program
>> for free data recovery if you sent in your permanently-locked-up
>> drive. Not clear how many
>> firmware updates they had. Seems that people were not satisfied
>> that the firmware fix did anything other than throttle the
>> performance. Interesting coincidence that they also changed the
>> warranty from 5-years to, I think, three.
>> I stayed away from that whole mess.
>>>> NTFS doesn't seem to matter on smaller drives where you can do a
>>>> direct ntfs/fat32 comparison on the same hardware.
>>> So far the advantage I see for NTFS is extended attributes,
>>> i.e. per user permissions. For a single-user machine and
>>> for external drives this is rather irrelevant.
>
>> Doesn't fat32 have a 4GB file size limit?
>
> Yes.
>
>> Big problem if you store DVD images
>
> And files created on a PVR etc.
>
>> or large backup files on your external drive.
>
> Those arent generally a problem, because the backup apps all allow for that limitation.
>
>
Yes, but if you made the backup to an ntfs drive and tried to copy it to
the external drive, you have a problem. Allowing for a limitation works
great if you know about that limitation beforehand and plan for it.
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage mike <spamme0@go.com> wrote:
> Arno wrote:
[...]
>>> There have been numerous complaints about recent generations of
>>> hard drives in the 1TB range.
>>
>> Oh? I have several Samsungs and WDs and no issues. I don't
>> remember reading more about these or other 1TB drives. Do
>> you have specifics?
> Don't know how you missed it. Back around September,
> the press was so bad on Seagate .11 series drives in the 1-1.5TB range
> that they were practically giving them away. They had a program
> for free data recovery if you sent in your permanently-locked-up drive.
Ah, that. But that was a firmware issue and well understood, not
bad drive quality.
> Not clear how many
> firmware updates they had. Seems that people were not satisfied
> that the firmware fix did anything other than throttle the performance.
> Interesting coincidence that they also changed the warranty from 5-years
> to, I think, three.
> I stayed away from that whole mess.
Well, yes, Seagate currently is the one to tay away from.
>>
>>> NTFS doesn't seem to matter on smaller drives where you can do a
>>> direct ntfs/fat32 comparison on the same hardware.
>>
>> So far the advantage I see for NTFS is extended attributes,
>> i.e. per user permissions. For a single-user machine and
>> for external drives this is rather irrelevant.
> Doesn't fat32 have a 4GB file size limit? Big problem if
> you store DVD images or large backup files on your external drive.
FAT32 has this limit, but a lot of software can work
around it. Or use Linux for backups and images in the
first place. That is what I do, the substandard MS trash
is restriced to things that will only work there with me.
Mostly games.
Arno
--
Arno Wagner, Dr. sc. techn., Dipl. Inform., CISSP -- Email: arno@wagner.name
GnuPG: ID: 1E25338F FP: 0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
----
Cuddly UI's are the manifestation of wishful thinking. -- Dylan Evans
> Arno wrote:
[...]
>>> There have been numerous complaints about recent generations of
>>> hard drives in the 1TB range.
>>
>> Oh? I have several Samsungs and WDs and no issues. I don't
>> remember reading more about these or other 1TB drives. Do
>> you have specifics?
> Don't know how you missed it. Back around September,
> the press was so bad on Seagate .11 series drives in the 1-1.5TB range
> that they were practically giving them away. They had a program
> for free data recovery if you sent in your permanently-locked-up drive.
Ah, that. But that was a firmware issue and well understood, not
bad drive quality.
> Not clear how many
> firmware updates they had. Seems that people were not satisfied
> that the firmware fix did anything other than throttle the performance.
> Interesting coincidence that they also changed the warranty from 5-years
> to, I think, three.
> I stayed away from that whole mess.
Well, yes, Seagate currently is the one to tay away from.
>>
>>> NTFS doesn't seem to matter on smaller drives where you can do a
>>> direct ntfs/fat32 comparison on the same hardware.
>>
>> So far the advantage I see for NTFS is extended attributes,
>> i.e. per user permissions. For a single-user machine and
>> for external drives this is rather irrelevant.
> Doesn't fat32 have a 4GB file size limit? Big problem if
> you store DVD images or large backup files on your external drive.
FAT32 has this limit, but a lot of software can work
around it. Or use Linux for backups and images in the
first place. That is what I do, the substandard MS trash
is restriced to things that will only work there with me.
Mostly games.
Arno
--
Arno Wagner, Dr. sc. techn., Dipl. Inform., CISSP -- Email: arno@wagner.name
GnuPG: ID: 1E25338F FP: 0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
----
Cuddly UI's are the manifestation of wishful thinking. -- Dylan Evans
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@spammenot.yahoo.com> wrote:
> mike wrote:
>> Don't know if any of this is relevant, but...
>> I started having file transfer problems when I installed vista.
>> Network file transfers to/from XP failed randomly, but only when the file
>> being transferred exceeded ~4MB and was in the middle of a multi-file
>> transfer. Also seemed to matter which end of the pipe initiated
>> the transfer.
>> I couldn't make a vista to vista file transfer fail.
> Weird. There's apparently a new networking paradigm with Vista and 7
> than there was for XP. You need to enable some kind of compatibility
> mode to make it work with XP.
>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
>> front-mounted ports on my dell.
>> Hubs are a no-no.
> Good point, I just plugged the drives into whatever free ports were
> available at the time without much thought.
And that is what normaly should do. Seems MS screwed up here
somewhere and has far too little resilience in their USB stack.
Arno
--
Arno Wagner, Dr. sc. techn., Dipl. Inform., CISSP -- Email: arno@wagner.name
GnuPG: ID: 1E25338F FP: 0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
----
Cuddly UI's are the manifestation of wishful thinking. -- Dylan Evans
> mike wrote:
>> Don't know if any of this is relevant, but...
>> I started having file transfer problems when I installed vista.
>> Network file transfers to/from XP failed randomly, but only when the file
>> being transferred exceeded ~4MB and was in the middle of a multi-file
>> transfer. Also seemed to matter which end of the pipe initiated
>> the transfer.
>> I couldn't make a vista to vista file transfer fail.
> Weird. There's apparently a new networking paradigm with Vista and 7
> than there was for XP. You need to enable some kind of compatibility
> mode to make it work with XP.
>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
>> front-mounted ports on my dell.
>> Hubs are a no-no.
> Good point, I just plugged the drives into whatever free ports were
> available at the time without much thought.
And that is what normaly should do. Seems MS screwed up here
somewhere and has far too little resilience in their USB stack.
Arno
--
Arno Wagner, Dr. sc. techn., Dipl. Inform., CISSP -- Email: arno@wagner.name
GnuPG: ID: 1E25338F FP: 0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
----
Cuddly UI's are the manifestation of wishful thinking. -- Dylan Evans
-
- Posts: 6
- Joined: 10 Jan 2010, 00:00
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
Arno wrote:
> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@spammenot.yahoo.com> wrote:
>> mike wrote:
>>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
>>> front-mounted ports on my dell.
>>> Hubs are a no-no.
>
>> Good point, I just plugged the drives into whatever free ports were
>> available at the time without much thought.
>
> And that is what normaly should do. Seems MS screwed up here
> somewhere and has far too little resilience in their USB stack.
>
> Arno
Well, I reran the file transfer that I was running just before the last
crash. The drives have been rearranged on the USB chain. It went through
properly this time. Not really a scientific observation, but anecdotal.
We'll see if the system stabilizes after a few more days pass.
Yousuf Khan
> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@spammenot.yahoo.com> wrote:
>> mike wrote:
>>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
>>> front-mounted ports on my dell.
>>> Hubs are a no-no.
>
>> Good point, I just plugged the drives into whatever free ports were
>> available at the time without much thought.
>
> And that is what normaly should do. Seems MS screwed up here
> somewhere and has far too little resilience in their USB stack.
>
> Arno
Well, I reran the file transfer that I was running just before the last
crash. The drives have been rearranged on the USB chain. It went through
properly this time. Not really a scientific observation, but anecdotal.
We'll see if the system stabilizes after a few more days pass.
Yousuf Khan
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
On Jan 13, 8:47
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@yahoo.com> wrote:
> Arno wrote:
>> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@spammenot.yahoo.com> wrote:
>>> mike wrote:
>>>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
>>>> front-mounted ports on my dell.
>>>> Hubs are a no-no.
>>
>>> Good point, I just plugged the drives into whatever free ports were
>>> available at the time without much thought.
>>
>> And that is what normaly should do. Seems MS screwed up here
>> somewhere and has far too little resilience in their USB stack.
>>
>> Arno
> Well, I reran the file transfer that I was running just before the last
> crash. The drives have been rearranged on the USB chain. It went through
> properly this time. Not really a scientific observation, but anecdotal.
> We'll see if the system stabilizes after a few more days pass.
Sounds good to me. Let us know. I have had to take USB ports out
of service in the past as well, but that was on an ASUS board
where they had insufficient cooling on the southbridge, and
it was not really a surprise to me that portst started giving
up after about 2 years. No more ASUS for me, they are more
expensive and their engineering sucks badly lately.
As to the damaged port, it would still support a mouse or the
like, but filetransfers resulted in device disconnects under
Linux, a bit like your situation. Incidentially, this problem
also affected the SATA port with the same number, I guess they
were arranged in SATA/USB pairs on the chip.
Arno
--
Arno Wagner, Dr. sc. techn., Dipl. Inform., CISSP -- Email: arno@wagner.name
GnuPG: ID: 1E25338F FP: 0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
----
Cuddly UI's are the manifestation of wishful thinking. -- Dylan Evans
> Arno wrote:
>> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@spammenot.yahoo.com> wrote:
>>> mike wrote:
>>>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
>>>> front-mounted ports on my dell.
>>>> Hubs are a no-no.
>>
>>> Good point, I just plugged the drives into whatever free ports were
>>> available at the time without much thought.
>>
>> And that is what normaly should do. Seems MS screwed up here
>> somewhere and has far too little resilience in their USB stack.
>>
>> Arno
> Well, I reran the file transfer that I was running just before the last
> crash. The drives have been rearranged on the USB chain. It went through
> properly this time. Not really a scientific observation, but anecdotal.
> We'll see if the system stabilizes after a few more days pass.
Sounds good to me. Let us know. I have had to take USB ports out
of service in the past as well, but that was on an ASUS board
where they had insufficient cooling on the southbridge, and
it was not really a surprise to me that portst started giving
up after about 2 years. No more ASUS for me, they are more
expensive and their engineering sucks badly lately.
As to the damaged port, it would still support a mouse or the
like, but filetransfers resulted in device disconnects under
Linux, a bit like your situation. Incidentially, this problem
also affected the SATA port with the same number, I guess they
were arranged in SATA/USB pairs on the chip.
Arno
--
Arno Wagner, Dr. sc. techn., Dipl. Inform., CISSP -- Email: arno@wagner.name
GnuPG: ID: 1E25338F FP: 0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
----
Cuddly UI's are the manifestation of wishful thinking. -- Dylan Evans
Re: Windows can't handle NTFS on external hard disks?
Arno wrote:
> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@yahoo.com> wrote:
>> Arno wrote:
>>> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@spammenot.yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>> mike wrote:
>>>>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
>>>>> front-mounted ports on my dell.
>>>>> Hubs are a no-no.
>>>> Good point, I just plugged the drives into whatever free ports were
>>>> available at the time without much thought.
>>> And that is what normaly should do. Seems MS screwed up here
>>> somewhere and has far too little resilience in their USB stack.
>>>
>>> Arno
>
>> Well, I reran the file transfer that I was running just before the last
>> crash. The drives have been rearranged on the USB chain. It went through
>> properly this time. Not really a scientific observation, but anecdotal.
>> We'll see if the system stabilizes after a few more days pass.
>
> Sounds good to me. Let us know. I have had to take USB ports out
> of service in the past as well, but that was on an ASUS board
> where they had insufficient cooling on the southbridge, and
> it was not really a surprise to me that portst started giving
> up after about 2 years. No more ASUS for me, they are more
> expensive and their engineering sucks badly lately.
>
> As to the damaged port, it would still support a mouse or the
> like, but filetransfers resulted in device disconnects under
> Linux, a bit like your situation. Incidentially, this problem
> also affected the SATA port with the same number, I guess they
> were arranged in SATA/USB pairs on the chip.
>
> Arno
Probably doesn't apply in this situation, but if the port is powering
a high power device, like a bus-powered external disk, the current limit
can fail. Some are active current limits, others are PTC resettable
fuses. If you believe the spec on a PTC "fuse", the series resistance
goes up substantially the first time it "blows".
That makes it run hotter, so takes less current to "blow".
> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@yahoo.com> wrote:
>> Arno wrote:
>>> In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@spammenot.yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>> mike wrote:
>>>>> I've had usb file transfer failures to external drives when using the
>>>>> front-mounted ports on my dell.
>>>>> Hubs are a no-no.
>>>> Good point, I just plugged the drives into whatever free ports were
>>>> available at the time without much thought.
>>> And that is what normaly should do. Seems MS screwed up here
>>> somewhere and has far too little resilience in their USB stack.
>>>
>>> Arno
>
>> Well, I reran the file transfer that I was running just before the last
>> crash. The drives have been rearranged on the USB chain. It went through
>> properly this time. Not really a scientific observation, but anecdotal.
>> We'll see if the system stabilizes after a few more days pass.
>
> Sounds good to me. Let us know. I have had to take USB ports out
> of service in the past as well, but that was on an ASUS board
> where they had insufficient cooling on the southbridge, and
> it was not really a surprise to me that portst started giving
> up after about 2 years. No more ASUS for me, they are more
> expensive and their engineering sucks badly lately.
>
> As to the damaged port, it would still support a mouse or the
> like, but filetransfers resulted in device disconnects under
> Linux, a bit like your situation. Incidentially, this problem
> also affected the SATA port with the same number, I guess they
> were arranged in SATA/USB pairs on the chip.
>
> Arno
Probably doesn't apply in this situation, but if the port is powering
a high power device, like a bus-powered external disk, the current limit
can fail. Some are active current limits, others are PTC resettable
fuses. If you believe the spec on a PTC "fuse", the series resistance
goes up substantially the first time it "blows".
That makes it run hotter, so takes less current to "blow".