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| news@celticbear.com wrote: > In our small business, we have to hold onto gigs of data. And sadly, > disgustingly, we don't have any good backup (periodic DVD burning when > we can) and the PC holding the info just has a couple of ATA HD's. > > We're needing to put together a file server, and I'm looking into mobos > that handle RAID 10. From what I can see, that's the best balance of > efficiency and performance even with the 50% size usage. > > Here're my questions: > I am finding it hard to find info on how the RAID is managed and if a > drive fails, how to replace it and rebuild the array. Some info I > REALLY need to know before I set one up. =) > I've found lots of info about what an array does but no real meat on > managing an array. > Any pointers of where I can go to find actual how-to's would be > appreciated. > > I'm pretty comfortable with Fedora Core. But, I'm also looking into > Slackware since a lot I've found indicates it's a bit (or a lot) more > stable, secure, and tested. > So, does the OS handle array management, or software apart from the OS? > (When I installed a SATA on my own PC I had to install some HD software > that loads up before the OS does. > So does picking the OS matter too much when considering RAID? > > And, how hard is it to replace a RAIDed drive? > If I have a RAID 10 and a drive goes bad, is it as easy as replacing > the drive and selecting something in a program that "rebuilds the > array"? > (How would I know a drive's gone bad anyway? Does the RAID do a > constant parity check and whatnot and let me know of abnormalities? Or > do I have to run an FSCK or something now and then? > > Thanks for any feedback and information! > I would go out and buy an external enclosure with a few drives and backup right now. Then buy the "mdadm" book for education on how it all works. You might also learn about RAID-6 storage, it will survive the failure of any two drives, like RAID-10, but needs far fewer drives. For data on N drives, R10 needs 2*(N+1) and R6 needs N+2. You want a hot spare with either, and RAID-10 performs better after a two drive failure. Start climbing the learning curve, people on the net can only provide places to look. -- bill davidsen SBC/Prodigy Yorktown Heights NY data center http://newsgroups.news.prodigy.com |
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