I have command console on the HD already. Yeah, I heard about NTFSDOS Pro but the problem is no one has the registered 4.03 version so I can't create the bootdisk. I run all my servers on a dedicated Unix machine since Windows is pretty insecure as it is
I'm using the ABIT BE6II v2.0 which uses the 370 HPT and Intel 440BX chipset. I haven't tried the WinXP System Restore but I know the WinME system restore never restored and always failed in the restore process. In WinXP, HPT Drivers 2.31 broke the System Restore function unless you deleted the hptpro.sys file. HPT 2.32, 2.33 and versions before 2.32 didn't have the problem.
From HighPoint's website, in drivers 2.32 h**p://www.highpoint-tech.com/driver_v232_370_372.zip - the readme.txt mentions the following so you probably never used version 2.32 drivers.
3. Revision History
====================
v2.32 07/01/2002
* Fix 48bit LBA formatting issue
* Fix hptpro.sys problem on Windows XP system restore and sparse files
* use PMM to allocate BIOS memory
* Disable BIOS EBDA reallocation by default
v2.31 01/09/2002
* Performance improved
* Fix BIOS compatibility issue with Adaptec SCSI
* Fix Seagate Barracuda III and IV mode to ATA100
* Show capacity by 1G=1,000,000,000 Bytes
* Fix BIOS bug "drive capacity incorrect after deleting a broken array"
v2.3 12/20/2001
* Add support for stripe size 128K-2M
* Support multi controller
* Modify driver for HPT370/370A compatibility
* Fix reading ATA/133 disk error when PCI clock is lower than 33MHz
* Fix compatibility problem with Intel IAA driver under Windows ME
* Fix BIOS compatibility issue with MSI845 mainboard
v2.2 12/08/2001
* Performance improved
* Fix GUI re-open bug when rebuilding an array
v2.1 11/15/2001
* Add 48bit LBA (Big Drive) support
* Fix BIOS display problem on S3 display adapter
* Fix BIOS BBS support
* Fix Windows ME hibernating problem
I actually already have the fix you mentioned
for snmp and the problem is still there. It's not someone probing the machine since even if I block the ports, the same thing still happens... the HDD would have high activity after my account is logged on and being idle for 10 hours or so and then unless i kill and restart snmp.exe, I will run out of system resources in WinXP and have to restart. That's why I'm thinking it might be because snmp logs to another file somewhere that the file is getting too large.