Bricked my kurobox
Tom Metro
blu at vl.com
Mon Apr 30 19:23:15 EDT 2007
John Abreau wrote:
> The box came without a hard drive. I installed a new hard drive in it
> initially, and it booted into its flash ROM.
So what mechanism does it provide to interact with it when it is in this
state with a raw drive? Telenet? Web UI?
Can you interact with it if the drive is disconnected? That would at
least confirm that the Flash image is still functioning normally.
> I was unable to load the supplied tarball...
Can you elaborate on that some more?
I take it it isn't designed to work like a typical turn-key
Bring-Your-Own-Disk (BYOD) NAS box, where you just plug in a disk, and
it either automatically, or via a UI operation, partitions and formats
the disk?
Instead they have a portion of the OS on the hard drive and its up to
the customer to load that onto the drive?
The right way, in my opinion, to build a small, low-power NAS box is to
put the full OS into flash (given that you can get 4 GB cards for $50
these days and a more modest 1 GB card for next to nothing, this is
easily doable), and preferably use a removable CF card, which can be
attached to any PC as an IDE drive using a low-cost adapter.
If the box can accept multiple IDE drives, you might want to consider
using a CF adapter as described above, providing you can hack it to
bypass booting from the internal flash.
> I shouldn't need to overwrite the entire 250 GB. I would have
> thought that 1024 bytes was sufficient, but I can certainly try
> zeroing a larger amount. What would you suggest: 10K? 100K?
10K is probably sufficient, but it'll only take seconds to zero the
first megabyte, so might as well do that.
-Tom
--
Tom Metro
Venture Logic, Newton, MA, USA
"Enterprise solutions through open source."
Professional Profile: http://tmetro.venturelogic.com/
--
This message has been scanned for viruses and
dangerous content by MailScanner, and is
believed to be clean.
More information about the Discuss
mailing list