Looks like one of the disks has bad sectors. Are you using the hardware card to do the raid? With ZFS, that is a bad idea. If not, check this link:
https://www.forwardingplane.net/2014/03/replace-zfs-raidz1-disk/
Are you running Proxmox in a virtual environment (Oracle's Virtualbox for example)? You will have trouble getting Win 2008 to work under those setups. Use an actual physical box.
What error gets logged when you try to restart pveproxy on px1? Make sure these daemons are running on it also.
https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Service_daemons
I never tried it on a spanned volume, but why not install the converter application and test? Of course, make a backup of your data on that spanned volume first and make a snapshot of the VM. You could also create a fourth disk, copy the data from D to it, and then remap that fourth disk to D...
I agree with fireon. For migrating from VMWare, I just install VMWare Converter on the VM to migrate and send the resulting VMDK file to my Proxmox shared storage or whatever. You then create a new "hardware matching" VM within Proxmox and map its hard drive to the VMDK file (edit the...
Of course, I simply wanted to make sure the drives/controller themselves were not faulty in some way. I was not suggesting you use something other than Proxmox.
Just wondering, have you tried installing VMWare ESXi 6.5 on that box to see if the drives are detected correctly? At least you can verify that they are okay using another Linux variant.
I would recommend just getting some disks and using the ZFS option during Proxmox instllation. You can choose up to 8 drives I believe. Just go with zraid mirror. Do not worry about configuring anything on your controller.
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