This monitor checks the state of the file system on the targeted cluster shared volume.
NTFS has reported that the Cluster Shared Volume is either corrupted or completely unavailable. Some data stored on the volume may be inaccessible.
A logical disk may become corrupted or inaccessible due to a number of reasons some of which include:
A physical disk related to the Cluster Shared Volume has been removed or failed
A physical disk related to the Cluster Shared Volume has become corrupt (for example; bad sectors) or inoperable
Check the status of your hardware for any failures (for example, a disk, controller, cabling failure). In most cases, the system log contains additional events from the lower-level storage drivers that indicate the cause of the failure.
After you have isolated and resolved the hardware problem:
Open the Disk Management snap-in.
Rescan the disks and then reactivate any disks with errors.
Run chkdsk on any reactivated volumes.
Target | Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.NewOS | ||
Parent Monitor | System.Health.AvailabilityState | ||
Category | AvailabilityHealth | ||
Enabled | False | ||
Alert Generate | True | ||
Alert Severity | Error | ||
Alert Priority | Normal | ||
Alert Auto Resolve | True | ||
Monitor Type | Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.Monitoring.NTFS.Monitortype.NanoServer | ||
Remotable | True | ||
Accessibility | Public | ||
Alert Message |
| ||
RunAs | Default |
<UnitMonitor ID="Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.Monitoring.NTFS.NanoServer" Accessibility="Public" Enabled="false" Target="Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.NewOS" ParentMonitorID="SystemHealth!System.Health.AvailabilityState" Remotable="true" Priority="Normal" TypeID="Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.Monitoring.NTFS.Monitortype.NanoServer" ConfirmDelivery="false">
<Category>AvailabilityHealth</Category>
<AlertSettings AlertMessage="Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.Monitoring.NTFS.AlertMessage">
<AlertOnState>Error</AlertOnState>
<AutoResolve>true</AutoResolve>
<AlertPriority>Normal</AlertPriority>
<AlertSeverity>Error</AlertSeverity>
<AlertParameters>
<AlertParameter1>$Target/Host/Property[Type="Windows!Microsoft.Windows.Computer"]/PrincipalName$</AlertParameter1>
<AlertParameter2>$Target/Property[Type="Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.Base"]/ClusterSharedVolumeName$</AlertParameter2>
<AlertParameter3>$Target/Property[Type="Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.Base"]/FriendlyVolumeName$</AlertParameter3>
<AlertParameter4>$Target/Property[Type="Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.Base"]/PartitionName$</AlertParameter4>
<AlertParameter5>$Data/Context/Property[@Name='NTFSIsDirty']$</AlertParameter5>
</AlertParameters>
</AlertSettings>
<OperationalStates>
<OperationalState ID="MonitorOk" MonitorTypeStateID="MonitorOk" HealthState="Success"/>
<OperationalState ID="MonitorError" MonitorTypeStateID="MonitorError" HealthState="Error"/>
</OperationalStates>
<Configuration>
<IntervalSeconds>900</IntervalSeconds>
<SyncTime/>
<LogSuccessEvent>false</LogSuccessEvent>
<ScriptGroupId>ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring</ScriptGroupId>
<TargetComputer>$Target/Host/Property[Type="Windows!Microsoft.Windows.Computer"]/PrincipalName$</TargetComputer>
<ClusterName>$Target/Property[Type="Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.Base"]/ClusterName$</ClusterName>
<TimeoutSeconds>300</TimeoutSeconds>
<ClusterSharedVolumeName>$Target/Property[Type="Microsoft.Windows.Server.ClusterSharedVolumeMonitoring.ClusterSharedVolume.Base"]/ClusterSharedVolumeName$</ClusterSharedVolumeName>
<BADPattern>1</BADPattern>
</Configuration>
</UnitMonitor>