HCHTech
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,203
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
I visited a potential client today to look at their stuff and listen to their list of problems. They have a 3-yr old server built by their former in-house employee/tech. The server was built in July of 2015, using SBS2011. It could be worse - Xeon, 32GB RAM, MicroSemi/Adaptec raid card with battery backup, SAS drives. His/her ignorance is showing a bit because the array is 4x1TB drives in a RAID 5 (ugh). So the base capacity of the array is 3TB.
The array is fomatted in MBR, with 3 partitions, a 100MB System Reserved, a 143.48GB C: drive, and a 1905.42GB E: drive for the data. There is 744.99GB unallocated at the end of the disk.
The in-house guy is no more, didn't get the story, but the parting appears to have been amicable. The reason I was called was because their email was down. A quick look showed 3GB free (I think I see the problem!) on the C partition (which had the 30GB Exchange database) and 190GB free on the E partition.
So, to get their email back up, I did some minor cleanup, then relocated the email databases to the E partition, and reduced the size of their 45GB swap file (!) and relocated it to the E partition as well. After that work, they have 75GB free on the C partition and 145GB free on the E partition. Email works - yea.
We had a quick debriefing meeting, during which they asked me to prepare a quote to take over their servicing.
So - on to make a plan for moving forward. The immediate problem is that they need less data or more storage on the server. Then, in a couple of years, I can pitch a new server.
Since the array is MBR, the max size is 2TB. Predictably, all options are greyed out when I right-click on the unallocated space in disk management.
So for folks who have bumped into this MBR limit before, is there a way I can utilize the unallocated space without a reformat of the entire array to GPT? I've read that Server08/SBS2011 is much happier with the boot drive on MBR as opposed to GPT. I've not done it personally.
If I CAN reformat to GPT, has anyone use the tools like Aomei that promise to do it non-destructively? I would obviously take an image beforehand, but don't know the product well enough to recommend it.
Maybe I should leave the disks as they are and just add a NAS for additional storage until the server can be replaced.
The array is fomatted in MBR, with 3 partitions, a 100MB System Reserved, a 143.48GB C: drive, and a 1905.42GB E: drive for the data. There is 744.99GB unallocated at the end of the disk.
The in-house guy is no more, didn't get the story, but the parting appears to have been amicable. The reason I was called was because their email was down. A quick look showed 3GB free (I think I see the problem!) on the C partition (which had the 30GB Exchange database) and 190GB free on the E partition.
So, to get their email back up, I did some minor cleanup, then relocated the email databases to the E partition, and reduced the size of their 45GB swap file (!) and relocated it to the E partition as well. After that work, they have 75GB free on the C partition and 145GB free on the E partition. Email works - yea.
We had a quick debriefing meeting, during which they asked me to prepare a quote to take over their servicing.
So - on to make a plan for moving forward. The immediate problem is that they need less data or more storage on the server. Then, in a couple of years, I can pitch a new server.
Since the array is MBR, the max size is 2TB. Predictably, all options are greyed out when I right-click on the unallocated space in disk management.
So for folks who have bumped into this MBR limit before, is there a way I can utilize the unallocated space without a reformat of the entire array to GPT? I've read that Server08/SBS2011 is much happier with the boot drive on MBR as opposed to GPT. I've not done it personally.
If I CAN reformat to GPT, has anyone use the tools like Aomei that promise to do it non-destructively? I would obviously take an image beforehand, but don't know the product well enough to recommend it.
Maybe I should leave the disks as they are and just add a NAS for additional storage until the server can be replaced.