This is odd. I successfully set up Memtest on a CD to check the 32GB of RAM in my MacPro4,1 (OSX 10.8.3) per Beth's instructions in an earlier thread (thank you!). Running it, I instantly got errors, so I started pulling out RAM and re-testing. In a nutshell, it appears my memory wasn't the issue, it was an external RAID drive.
How is that possible? And what does that mean?
Details:
Here's the test protocol. The numbers indicate the bay the memory was originally in when I started; as I isolated the issue, I always put the memory in the Mac's first 1-2 bays.
1. 4,3,2,1 - Errors
2. 2,1 - Errors
3. 4,3 - No errors
4. 1 - No errors
5. 2 - No errors
6. 4,3,2,1 - No Errors
But here's the thing. I noticed during the first two runs that when Memtest was starting up, on the startup screen with the copyright (©Silicon Image, etc...), there was an extra line:
1 eSATA-2 ExternalRAID 3726GB
noting the external I plugged in. So for the hell of it I unplugged it between Tests 2 and 3. Once I got down to the 6th test, which now showed no errors, I guessed was the external. Sure enough, testing it once more with the external on and all memory in, I got the same errors.
So my question is what this means. The screen indicates Memtest is only testing the internal memory, so how could an external (a G-Tech 1TB RAID drive) prompt errors? Is it instead including the external's memory in its test?
More importantly, does this mean that my external is somehow corrupting the on-board memory when it's on? I didn't even know externals had memory to corrupt, but does this mean that's something I should ask the manufacturer about?
Screenshots:
Above: first run, external drive connected
Above: later in the first run
A later pass with all memory in but the external OFF
Thanks in advance for any insight(s) you might have.
How is that possible? And what does that mean?
Details:
Here's the test protocol. The numbers indicate the bay the memory was originally in when I started; as I isolated the issue, I always put the memory in the Mac's first 1-2 bays.
1. 4,3,2,1 - Errors
2. 2,1 - Errors
3. 4,3 - No errors
4. 1 - No errors
5. 2 - No errors
6. 4,3,2,1 - No Errors
But here's the thing. I noticed during the first two runs that when Memtest was starting up, on the startup screen with the copyright (©Silicon Image, etc...), there was an extra line:
1 eSATA-2 ExternalRAID 3726GB
noting the external I plugged in. So for the hell of it I unplugged it between Tests 2 and 3. Once I got down to the 6th test, which now showed no errors, I guessed was the external. Sure enough, testing it once more with the external on and all memory in, I got the same errors.
So my question is what this means. The screen indicates Memtest is only testing the internal memory, so how could an external (a G-Tech 1TB RAID drive) prompt errors? Is it instead including the external's memory in its test?
More importantly, does this mean that my external is somehow corrupting the on-board memory when it's on? I didn't even know externals had memory to corrupt, but does this mean that's something I should ask the manufacturer about?
Screenshots:
Above: first run, external drive connected
Above: later in the first run
A later pass with all memory in but the external OFF
Thanks in advance for any insight(s) you might have.
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