11-19-2007 07:02 PM
11-20-2007 10:11 AM
Hi Kevin,
It sounds like your BIOS options might be the culprit to this issue. I would check the boot settings in the BIOS (press <del> upon rebooting the device to enter the BIOS) and make sure the ordering will make sure it searches the hard drive for the boot program.
Cheers,
Emilie K. | Applications Engineer | National Instruments
11-20-2007 11:42 AM
Hi Emilie,
I have another identical hard drive that properly boots so I'm pretty sure it's not the BIOS. I double checked the BIOS anyway and shows the hard drive as the second boot device (behind the floppy).
Kevin
11-23-2007 04:41 AM
Hi Emilie,
Having formatted the new Hard Drive, how have you set up it's partitions ?
Does the new Hard Drive have an active Primary Partition, on which the operating system is loaded ?
regards,
Gary.
11-26-2007 01:53 PM
11-27-2007 02:10 PM
Just as some more words of wisdom to collect with the other good responses before me, make sure that the hard drive that you are booting from is in the primary partition as well as in the Master position for hard drives. I ran into this problem earlier this fall and it took me a while to find out what the problem was due to the fact that there was no descriptive error. I hope that you solve your problem soon.
Michael B
11-27-2007 02:25 PM
Thanks everybody for the all the advice. I got the hard drive to work. Using partion magic I discovered that there was no active drive set. Once I set the active drive it worked
Kevin
09-27-2009 07:29 AM
Hi kander1
how do you boot a pc as rt target?please describe step by step.
Thanks a lot.
09-28-2009 10:14 AM
Hi maji,
Take a look the article called Converting a Desktop PC to a LabVIEW Real-Time Target and its links, particularly the link to Using Desktop PCs as RT Targets with the Real-Time Module and see if this helps.
Regards,
Stephen S.