HP provides support for USB devices prior to the operating system loading through legacy USB support, which is enabled by default in the system ROM.

http://h18004.www1.hp.com/products/servers/platforms/usb-support.html

Can you disable that in the bios?  Disable legacy USB support?

Brian Desmond wrote:
That is possible, then. G4 was when they added the USB ports on the
front and the usb key stuff.
Thanks,
Brian Desmond
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

c - 312.731.3132


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:ActiveDir-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Albert Duro
Sent: Sunday, November 05, 2006 1:17 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] OT - USB HD no boot

DL380 R03 P2400XEON US

Product #: 257917-001

Thank you, Brian

----- Original Message -----
From: "Brian Desmond" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>
Sent: Saturday, November 04, 2006 6:09 PM
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT - USB HD no boot


What generation and model is the server - DL is just the make, still
need the model and year. :)

Thanks,
Brian Desmond
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

c - 312.731.3132


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:ActiveDir-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Albert Duro
Sent: Saturday, November 04, 2006 3:51 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] OT - USB HD no boot

Nothing doing.  I tried it on a 3-year old Proliant DL.  I couldn't
find any
USB settings, not in the boot order, not in the boot selections, not
anywhere.  It's back to the old switch and bai...er...boot

----- Original Message -----
From: "Albert Duro" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2006 7:14 PM
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] OT - Backup Follies


That's a great revelation.  Thank you.  I'll try it first thing in
the
morning.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Laura A. Robinson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2006 2:25 PM
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT - Backup Follies


Remember when I asked about the BIOS? :-)

http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/device/storage/usb-boot.mspx

You can check out the links at the end for more information, but
again,
this
is set in the BIOS of the machine.

Laura

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bob
Anderson
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2006 4:03 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT - Backup Follies

Susan,
How did you do that I would love to be able to  reboot
with a worry.


Bob
IT Guy


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Susan Bradley,
CPA aka Ebitz - SBS Rocks [MVP]
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2006 3:04 PM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] OT - Backup Follies

And on my DC I removed the USB drive as a boot device.

So now I can be at home in my jammies and remotely reboot the
server
with no issues and it will reboot just fine.

Bob Anderson wrote:
Laura,
Yea that on bit me big time.  Had our Domain Controller
running
and
added a USB Drive all was fine.  Along came Microsoft with
the darned
Updates and there 'Computer Must be restarted' Well it
restarted
alright and would not reboot.  Talked to IBM Server Support
for
4
hours be for I finally figured it out myself.  That was the
only time
I ever taught something to them and not the other way around.

I have since update the restart procedure to say 'Power off
the
USB
drive before the system restarts.'


Bob
IT Guy


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Laura
A.
Robinson
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2006 11:41 AM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT - Backup Follies

Umm, that was kinda the point I was trying to make, Bob. :-)

Laura


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Bob Anderson
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2006 11:09 AM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT - Backup Follies

Laura,
It doesn't matter what the boot order is. Most servers have
an
internal Raid configuration that doesn't kick in until after
the
machine goes through it's start up and by them it has
found the USB
and not the hard disks.

And yes I have this on two of my servers.

Bob Anderson
IT Guy
Kent Sporting Goods
433 Park Ave. S
New London OH 44851
419-929-7021 x315
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Laura
A.
Robinson
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2006 10:52 AM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] OT - Backup Follies

What's the boot order in the BIOS on those machines?

Laura


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Albert Duro
Sent: Friday, November 03, 2006 10:54 AM
To: ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] OT - Backup Follies

Ah, that brings up another interesting point.  I use USB

external hard


drives too, and I've found that some WinXP and
Server2003 machines will not boot if a USB hard drive is

attached--I

have to remember to turn it off while booting.
Anyone else seen this?

----- Original Message -----
From: "Susan Bradley, CPA aka Ebitz - SBS Rocks [MVP]"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>
Sent: Thursday, November 02, 2006 9:02 PM
Subject: Re: [ActiveDir] OT - Backup Follies (was) Exchange

Log files

--Disk
Full--



No tape drives here.  If it has a USB connection we are

in business.

Albert Duro wrote:

Yes, BE does do disk backup.  But I have some objections:
 A.  They don't make it easy, infact they make an
unnecessarily
complicated production of it.
 B.  I started doing NTBackup to disk while (and because)

I was still

troubleshooting BE.  When I gave up on BE and its

brethren, NTBackup

was a natural segway, and already in place and working.
 C.  I discovered one great advantage that

NTBackup-to-disk has over

any other backup system:  with a bit of planning, it is

proof against

almost any combination of crash and burn. You have a

backup file on

two or more disks/machines.  Things go bad, you can do

recovery from

any Windows machine; you can move or copy the backup

disks/files to

any machine.  Try doing that with a sophisticated tape-
based
or
SAN-based system.  Imagine having to replace the tape
drive/autoloader with the exact same type, while
rebuilding
a
same-hardware three-year old server to the exact same

configuration,

same SPs, same backup software, same drivers.  I can

guarantee that

at least one of those necessary replacement elements will
be
impossible to find, even under leisurely conditions. [1]

Yes, there

are strategies to deal with that, but if you could spend

that kind of

money, you would have gotten a double-redundant

bullet-proof system in the first place.

 I truly hope that I'm wrong out of lack of knowledge and

pessimism.

I am open to being corrected and encouraged.
 [1] Naturally, the tape drive drivers will be on the same

tape that

you can't access nohow.  Download the drivers from the

OEM, you say?

Chances are excellent that the OEM has gone out of

business, or sold

out to a giant  who prunes out what they don't like (and

what you

need), or changed the name or version number on it out of
sheer
orneryness.  If you do get to what looks like the right
drivers,
you're likely to find that the last minor upgrade version

that really

worked well for you has been dropped, or tweaked into

your trouble

zone.  I can testify to ALL these experiences.  I think

others can too.

 ----- Original Message -----

    *From:* Al Mulnick <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
    *To:* ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
    <mailto:ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>
    *Sent:* Thursday, November 02, 2006 3:27 PM
    *Subject:* Re: [ActiveDir] OT - Backup Follies (was)

Exchange Log

    files --Disk Full--

    Trying to remember exactly, but doesn't BE have an

option to use

    disk vs. tape drives?

    You *could* run a test to help simplify and rule out

some of the

    complexity. Could take a while, but might be worth it.

    Al

    On 11/2/06, *Albert Duro* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
    <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:

        Why does NTBackup work for me and BE not, when

they are at

        core the same product?
        I wondered about that too.  Here are my thoughts.
        First, NTBackup is a simpler product that doesn't

get tangled

        up with the complexities of scheduling and a GUI.
        But the real reason, I think, is that I've been
doing
        NTBackups to disk, while BE was to tape.
        I've always suspected that most, if not all of my

difficulties

        with BE had to do with the drivers for the tape

drives and

        autoloaders, and with the SCSI interface to
other devices
        ('other' being anything beyond the normal HD and
CD
complement)

            ----- Original Message -----
            *From:* Al Mulnick <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
            *To:* ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
            <mailto:ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>
            *Sent:* Wednesday, November 01, 2006 6:11 AM
            *Subject:* Re: [ActiveDir] Exchange Log files
-
-
Disk
Full--

            Well put Albert.  Thanks for that feedback.
            What still has me curious is why BE wouldn't

work in your

            environment and why ntbackup does (partially

at least).

ntbackup as written by the same exact people and has a lot
            of the same code (it's licensed by Microsoft

from Seagate

            last I checked). Ntbackup is the less

featured version

            designed for single host backups and extended

to act like

            it does more.

            So that said, I agree that the goal is that

your client's

            data is backed up.  I have to say that I

disagree that

            jury-rigs, mickey mouse and by the seat of

your pants is

            the long term solution though.  That's an

infrastructure

            component that will come back to haunt at some

point down

            the road.  As an interim fix, of course it can

work.  I'm

            not blinded by the big vendors to the point

that I think

            they have the only solution.  Far from it.

But I like to

            think that I can at least share some
perspective
and
            experience related to where it leads and I
definitely
            favor technology over layer8 processes.
Why?  Because
            layer8 changes and grows out of current
positions and
            foundational solutions should not have to be

decimated

            when that happens.  I've seen that way too

often to care

            to see it continue where possible.

            Basically, I hate to see a foundational

solution such as

            backup, rely on such complexity and human

intervention.  I

            completely understand that you have to do what

you have to

            do. When you wrote it in your original email,

it sounded

            like you approved of that method.  Reading

this last one,

            I can you don't.  I was just trying to point

out where

            that leads and trying to understand how you go

there.  I

            bet I would have gotten there the same way
you did ;)
            Best of luck getting that worked out.
            If you need anything from me, please don't

hesitate.  I

            have been known to make some backup

solutions work :)

Feel free to ping off-line if I can be of any help.




            On 10/31/06, *Albert Duro*
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]
            <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:

                Al, since you ask, no I don't see it

differently, at

                least not at the oratorical level.  But
where the
                rubber meets the road, things can look

very different.

                Like the military say, the best laid plan

falls apart

                the moment it meets the enemy.  You
assume that I
                monkey around with Ntbackup and balky
media
for
                economic reasons.  In fact, we spared no
expense
                (relative to our small size) to put in
                industrial-strength backup systems, both

software and

                hardware.  Even paid consultants to set
it up and
                manage it.
                It blew up in our faces.  Primarily

because Backup

                Exec just wouldn't work right in our

environment.

(I'm not saying that BE isn't a fine product, it would
                just never work for us).  Why not?

Don't know -- I

                couldn't figure it out.  Our
consultants couldn't
                figure it out.  Veritas support couldn't

either, nor

                the autoloader manufacturer.  For more

than two years,

                nobody could figure it out, until I

decided to stop

                throwing good money after bad.
                Did I try alternative products?  In the

same class,

                yes -- more tales of woe, but different

reasons.  We

                did not nor are we going to buy the

high-end systems,

                which cost more than our whole network is
worth.
                So I was left with NTBackup, and
admittedly
a
                little more gun-shyness about brand-name
backup
                products than is strictly rational.

That's what I

                have to work with, and I try to make the

best of it.

That's the 'real world' in my little corner of it.
                Believe me, when you and joe and others on

this list

                urge us to 'make the best', I listen, I

learn, and I

                applaud.  And it does push me in that

direction.  But

                the only path there goes through 'make

the best of

                what you've got'.  It's bumpy and often

barricaded.

                But after all is said and done, the REAL

point is that

                I am preserving my clients' data and
keeping them
                happy.  Jury-rigs, mickey mouse, and

by-the-pants not

                withstanding.

                -- Original Message -----

                    *From:* Al Mulnick

<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

                    *To:* ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
                    <mailto:ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>
                    *Sent:* Sunday, October 29, 2006 4:30
AM
                    *Subject:* Re: [ActiveDir] Exchange
Log files
                    --Disk Full--

                    sub-optimal media are part of the
real world?
                     Wow, thanks :)
                     Truth be told, that's a rant of mine.

 I've heard

                    a lot (lately especially) about how we

want to do

                    things cheap and inexpensive and
we'll fix it
                    later and so on. I've also spent a

great deal of

                    time cleaning up that kind of stuff.
Unfortunately, once it escapes into the "real
                    world" then it becomes more difficult

to clean up

                    because you have to do so in front of
                    customers/clients.
                     Interesting approach though. Usually
a
less
                    disciplined from what I've seen and

often results

                    in more expense related to downtime
and
                    troubleshooting and lack of service.
I'm
                    interested if you see differently
though.
                     This area of the business fascinates
me....
                     On 10/28/06, *Albert Duro*
                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
                    <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>>
wrote:
                        I'm sure you and Susan are

right.  All I'm

                        saying is that it *can* happen,

and for me,

                        why take the chance when

one-job/one-task  is

                        easy to do.
                        Good point about the media, and
that
may
                        explain my case, but, hey,

sub-optimal media

                        situations are part of the real
world.
                            ----- Original Message -----
                            *From:* Al Mulnick
                            <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                            *To:*
ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
<mailto:ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>
                            *Sent:* Saturday, October 28,

2006 6:33 AM

                            *Subject:* Re: [ActiveDir]

Exchange Log

                            files --Disk Full--

                             I've not had that same
experience.
Granted, it's a limited feature utility
                            (note the use of the word

utility vs. tool

                            as requested) but it's still

capable of

                            doing more.  There were
some fixes to
                            ntbackup in service packs and

such.  You

                            might want to verify you're
using the
                            latest version of that's

what you see.

                             Also, check the media it's

headed to.

It's error handling is not very elegant,
                            but I've found it to be useful

and strong

                            enough to stand up to some

complex tasks

                            in the past. I've got several

running now

                            via cli that have been in

place for more

                            than half a year without issue

(I know, I

                            know, spend all that money on
an
                            enterprise backup system

only to backup

                            some machines locally.  But
there are
                            times when it makes more

sense, trust me.)

                             -ajm


                             On 10/27/06, *Albert Duro*
                            <[EMAIL PROTECTED]


<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:

                                I've found, with NTbackup,

that if you

                                cram two or more tasks

into a backup

                                job, it's very likely to

fail. For

                                example, if you do a

System State and

                                a file backup and an

Exchange backup

                                in the same job.  It's
best
to
                                separate each task into

its own job,

                                and sort it out in the

scheduling.

                                A mixed job will also work

for a while

                                and then fail, which

sounds like what

                                happened to OP.

                                    ----- Original Message
--
---
                                    *From:* Wells, James
Arthur
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                                    *To:*

ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org

<mailto:ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>

                                    *Cc:* Technical
Support
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

                                    *Sent:* Thursday,

October 26, 2006

                                    2:21 PM
                                    *Subject:* RE:
[ActiveDir]
                                    Exchange Log files

--Disk Full--

                                     Do you have multiple

information

                                    stores on this

storage group?

(If using Exchange Enterprise
                                    edition)...the logs

can't flush

                                    until all stores have
a
full
                                    backup, because the
logs
are
                                    shared...
                                     --James



-------------------------------------------------------------
-
----------

                                    *From:*

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                                    [mailto:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>]
                                    *On Behalf Of

*Technical Support

                                    *Sent:* Thursday,

October 26, 2006

                                    3:16 PM
                                    *To:*
ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org

<mailto:ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>;

ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org
<mailto:ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>

                                    *Subject:* RE:
[ActiveDir]
                                    Exchange Log files

--Disk Full--

                                     Hi,
                                     I am running Normal

Backup. Using

                                    NTBackup Utility.
Backing
up
                                    Information store.



-------------------------------------------------------------
-
----------

                                    *From:*

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                                    on behalf of Missy
Koslosky
                                    *Sent:* Thu

10/26/2006 12:49 PM

                                    *To:*

ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org

<mailto:ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>

                                    *Subject:* RE:
[ActiveDir]
                                    Exchange Log files

--Disk Full--

                                     Are you running full

(AKA normal)

                                    backups every night?

It seems not.

                                    Use NTBackup to

backup to disk

                                    (obviously, you'll

need a disk

                                    with over 120GB of
available
                                    space) and then use
whatever
                                    normal program you

use to back

                                    that backup onto tape.

This will

                                    keep you running

until you sort

                                    out why your normal
backup
                                    software isn't

flushing the logs

                                    when the backup
completes.
                                     How are you

currently running

                                    backups? What software

is in use?

                                    Are you sure it's

Exchange aware?

                                    Are you doing brick

level backups

                                    or copy backups

instead of a full

                                    backup? Neither will

flush the logs.

                                     I'd resolve this as

quickly as

                                    possible, because if

you are in a

                                    situation where you

have to replay

                                    the logs, you're NOT

going to be a

                                    happy camper.



-------------------------------------------------------------
-
----------

                                    *From:*

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                                    [mailto:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>]
                                    *On Behalf Of

*Technical Support

                                    *Sent:* Thursday,

October 26, 2006

                                    11:09 AM
                                    *To:*

ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org

<mailto:ActiveDir@mail.activedir.org>

                                    *Subject:*

[ActiveDir] Exchange

                                    Log files --Disk
Full--
                                     Hi All,
                                     Kindly suggest,

what i can do

                                    about my Exchange Log
files?
                                    I have about 120 GB

Log files for

                                    past 4 months. I have

a few doubts:-

                                     Do i really need all

those log

files?
                                    If yes, Then how is it

possible to

                                    manage with this as i

have a very

                                    limited space left.
                                    Can i delete these
log files?
                                    Backup doesnt remove

these log files?

                                     i am really running

out of space

                                    on my Exchange log

storage drive.

                                     *Thanks!!!*
                                    Ravi






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