Iam running ESX 4.1 on PE 1950. The problem, I am facing is F10 utility mode is not working. When, I boot the server and press F10 - I see the message entering utility mode. The server goes through the boot process and, I don't get utility mode. It goes straight to ESX 4. How can, I get F10 utility mode to work. I did not change anything on the PE 1950. Just upgraded the BIOS to 2.7. That is it. Look forward to your help.
The Utility Partition also has nothing to do with the RAID controller. To check the configuration of your RAID controller, you need to enter the configuration utility for the RAID controller during POST ... if you have a SAS 5/6, you will have a CTRL-C option, and if you have a PERC 5/6, you will have a CTRL-R option.
What is Firmware Restoration?
It can help you to upload the firmware in rescue mode when your router fails to upload firmware in a normal way. Required OS: Windows XP/7/8/10/11
My question is my Graph has failed due to Unique Index was not able to created on the table due to duplicates.But still I am able to see the records in the table.If a Graph fails, automatically the loaded records will be rollback right(I am running in Utility mode). But here the records were loaded.
Secondly, if dupes really exist, you need to either load them into a separate shadow table for the dupe (with singletons to the main table) or your other option is to extend the key into a composite key and tag the dupes as part of this key so they can load but will not violate constraints. Like a slowly changing dimension.
Now I was wondering what will be the reason, here i am using utility mode so once my Graph is success then only the commit will happen.Also I was thinking whether the error was from AI point of view or from SQL Loader.
Based on what you described, it appears intermittent and may have been resolved when the Mac was put in safe mode then checked again.However, if you feel there still might be issues, back up your Mac then reformat it ensuring the correct partition is set to the internal disk:
Unfortunately I've seen the same issue with Disk Utility on some of our organizations Macs. While booted into Recovery Mode and running First Aid, make sure to click "Show Details" and scroll back through the report to see if any unfixed errors are listed even if First Aid says everything is "Ok". Disk Utility today now lies to people saying everything is "Ok" even when errors are reported and I can confirm the file system is at fault with a system.
In the crash logs listed in the EtreCheck report one of the entries mentions "/usr/libexec/lsd" which I found online is related to the macOS Launch Services Daemon. Maybe try booting into Safe Mode which disables third party startup items & drivers to see if this may help narrow down the problem.
If you have a spare external USB3 drive, you can try performing a clean install of macOS to the external drive and booting to the external drive to see if the same issue occurs. Test it first with the default install before installing any third party apps, or migrating/restoring from a backup. You will need to modify the Startup Security Utility settings while booted into Recovery Mode to allow booting from an external USB3 drive. This can narrow the problem down to software/OS issue or an issue with the internal SSD and/or file system.
Right now I'm in the lengthy process of moving my time machine back ups (on a Seagate UltraTouch) to another external drive, as Seagate are going to send me a replacement (based on the DriveDx life-span pre fail command time out warning that there could be a problem with power supply or oxidized data cable). As soon as I'm done with the transfer I will do as you suggest, boot in recovery, run first aid and check the 'show details' option.
Thanks Nicholas. I still get the same error message with Disk Utility when I boot via Safe Mode, but again, not in recovery mode/normal mode. I'm wary of going through the process you describe as it is as you know time consuming, but perhaps it's the best step. I did DriveX on my external drive, and it has a 'command time out' and tells me there may be some problems with power supply or an oxidized data cable. I did unmount the drive and try the above process, but sadly still got that error message..... anyway seems a good idea for me to replace that drive before reinstalling the OS!
Thanks barberlives123 - I did as you suggested and it said there were no issues. I suppose I could call Apple to see if they have any ideas why I'm getting that error message with Disk Utility in Safe Mode (I'm still under warranty), and in the meantime get a new external hard drive for back ups given that is the only thing that has shown a potential problem via DriveDx...
So (after the 2 days it took me to find out you cannot transfer Time Machine backups that are on an APFS drive to another drive), I booted into Recovery Mode and ran First Aid again. It said everything is ok and "Show Details" did not report any unfixed errors. So I'm presuming the issue with doing this in Safe Mode is just a bug with Disk Utility rather than my drive? There is a post on Electiclight.co dated November 19 2021 which says this - that it's a problem Disk Utility has with APFS drives.
I recently began using the EOS Utility (v. 2.1.4) application for remote shooting, and I'm having a difficult time following the instructions for manually focusing the lens. With the lens switched to AF, and after the EOS Utility has opened to show the Remote Live View window, I drag the selection rectangle to the portion of the image where I wish to focus, then click on the magnifying glass to zoom in. According to the instructions, the Focus popup menu should include several focusing options, one of which is supposed to be "Live Mode" which then allows you to use the arrow buttons to step focus the lens.
I have no actual knowledge of that procedure, so consider the source. But I'd think that for it to work as you intend, the lens would have to be of the type that allows itself to be manually focused while in AF mode. You don't say what lens you're using, but not all lenses fall into that category.
What I don't understand is why Live Mode simply doesn't show up in the menu when it is in every piece of literature I've been able to dig up on the subject. Then again, it would seem like the Mac version of EOS Utility is not particularly well maintained...
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I want to do a clean install of el capitan OS. I booted to recovery mode, chose reinstall os x and followed the steps. So far so good. When it came to choose the destination disk where I wanted to install the OS, it did not show any hard drive, i.e Macintosh HD was not shown so I could select it. I figured I had to format it first. So I close the installation and went to Disk Utility. The problem is Disk Utility is stuck at loading and does not show anything.
My OS is corrupted, that is the reason why I want to do a fresh installation. With corrupted I mean, I can boot my system only if I go to single-mode and mount the hard drive with mount -uw / and then exit. But this is not a long term solution. I search everywhere in the web and there are many solutions out there, but none worked form me.
I tried erasing and formatting the hard drive when in single-mode with the help of diskutil. But this did not work because the DiskManagement Framework was missing. So I tried loading the files manually with launchctl. But still I can not use diskutil in single-mode.
The Disk Utility gets automatically unstuck. If your hard drive shows up, but the drives are grayed out, try restarting into Recovery mode (pressing Cmd+R after booting). After a couple of restarts you might be able to finally run First Aid on your drive.
If it returns back anything but the word "Verified", your drive is crashing. OS X usually doesn't get corrupt unless the user does something very outlandish and very deliberate. Most often it is because the HDD is beginning to fail and bad sectors are cropping up.
You didn't mention which Mac you have specifically but replacing a hard drive is actually quite easy. There are a couple of other posts here on Ask Different that go into this exact procedure. I will link them for reference.
When you boot into recovery mode, have a look at the menu bar at the top of the screen and there should be a utilities drop down with Disk Utility in there. From that Disk Utility you should have no problem formatting your drive.
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