May-10-2021 06:35 PM
May-12-2021 05:22 PM
May-11-2021 06:02 PM
May-11-2021 10:54 AM
theoldwizard1 wrote:rlw999 wrote:
I wouldn't run RAID-5 with such a large array, at least not unless you have good backups or don't care if you lose the data.
RAID is NEVER a substitute for backup !
Admittedly, my RAID array only gets backuped up once a week.
May-11-2021 10:46 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:rlw999 wrote:philh wrote:
First time I've ever had a hard drive DOA. Was upgrading drives in my home server, as the drives were a bit old and wanted to increase space. Five years ago, said I'll never run out of space, LOL. Four 8TB raid 5 should be good for awhile!
Large RAID-5 arrays take a long time (a day, or multiple days) to resilver after a disk loss, and if you lose another disk during the rebuild, you'll lose the entire array. Rebuilding itself stresses the disks making a multi-disk failure not uncommon.
Have worked with RAID systems on servers since the 1990s and what you posted isn't really true on good quality RAID systems.
Good quality dedicated hardware based RAID controllers have their own processor and on board buffer memory with a backup battery and handles rebuilds in the background and you never see any data loss with RAID5 unless you lose more than 1 drive at a time, perhaps might see a slight reduction in array speed while array has be degraded.
Best to avoid software based RAID, just not robust or fast once you see the difference between a dedicated Hardware based RAID.
May-11-2021 08:46 AM
JaxDad wrote:
I’ve dodged the bullet so far, but........ it’s going to happen, soon.
The big issue, and one of if not my biggest P!&% off, is the external drive DVR on my satellite TV service.
Some clever bunch of corporate bean-counters decided that if folks could access the content they’d have a data sharing problem.
Their solution? When you plug a new drive in to the sat. box it formats it in Linux and installs an auto-run program that looks at the S/N of the box, if it doesn’t match it won’t play. It also uses some weird, even for Linux, encryption that means you can’t even duplicate the drive.
So with MANY hours of content we can’t protect it, if the drive dies, it’s gone. It’s already noisy...... tick, tick, tick.
May-11-2021 08:28 AM
theoldwizard1 wrote:rlw999 wrote:
I wouldn't run RAID-5 with such a large array, at least not unless you have good backups or don't care if you lose the data.
RAID is NEVER a substitute for backup !
Admittedly, my RAID array only gets backuped up once a week.
May-11-2021 05:23 AM
rlw999 wrote:
I wouldn't run RAID-5 with such a large array, at least not unless you have good backups or don't care if you lose the data.
May-11-2021 04:37 AM
May-11-2021 04:37 AM
rlw999 wrote:philh wrote:
First time I've ever had a hard drive DOA. Was upgrading drives in my home server, as the drives were a bit old and wanted to increase space. Five years ago, said I'll never run out of space, LOL. Four 8TB raid 5 should be good for awhile!
I wouldn't run RAID-5 with such a large array, at least not unless you have good backups or don't care if you lose the data.
Large RAID-5 arrays take a long time (a day, or multiple days) to resilver after a disk loss, and if you lose another disk during the rebuild, you'll lose the entire array. Rebuilding itself stresses the disks making a multi-disk failure not uncommon.
I run a 5 disk RAID-6 array at home, which means I can lose up to 2 disks without data loss, but when I upgrade it, large disks are so cheap that I'll probably just go with mirroring (which means much faster rebuilds)
May-11-2021 03:59 AM
May-10-2021 09:20 PM
philh wrote:
First time I've ever had a hard drive DOA. Was upgrading drives in my home server, as the drives were a bit old and wanted to increase space. Five years ago, said I'll never run out of space, LOL. Four 8TB raid 5 should be good for awhile!
May-10-2021 06:55 PM