Date: Wed, 15 Dec 2004 16:05:12 -0800 From: Gianluca <gianluca@gmail.com> To: freebsd-stable@freebsd.org Subject: Re: drive failure during rebuild causes page fault Message-ID: <a9ef272704121516055fae24b5@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <6.1.2.0.2.20041215183830.030013b0@mail.rfnj.org> References: <20041213052628.GB78120@meer.net> <20041213054159.GC78120@meer.net> <20041213060549.GE78120@meer.net> <20041213192119.GB4781@meer.net> <41BE8F2D.8000407@DeepCore.dk> <a9ef27270412151516fcc7720@mail.gmail.com> <6.1.2.0.2.20041215183830.030013b0@mail.rfnj.org>
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> If you're thinking of using RAID instead of good timely backups, you need > to go back to the drawing board, because that is not what RAID is intended > to replace -- and is something it cannot replace. actually all the data I plan to keep on that server is gonna be backed up, either to cdr/dvdr or in the original audio cds that I still have. what I meant by integrity is trying to avoid having to go back to the backups to restore 120G (or more in this case) that were on a dead drive. I've done that before, and even if it's no mission-critical data, it remains a huge PITA :) thanks for the detailed explanation of how RAID5 works, somehow I didn't really catch the distinction between the normal and degraded operations on the array. what would be your recommendations for this particular (and very limited) application? thanks a lot for your help, g.
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