... or not to RAID.
Jan. 2nd, 2008 10:51 amNot only did your latest RAID attempt fail, but I have corrupted your main disk. Should I corrupt it more? (Y/N)
After a couple of attempts to rebuild the RAID1 on my computer, I have come away with a few more grey hairs, and a renewed resolve not to bother trying again. Both drives are working now, albeit non-RAID, and I think that I shall keep it that way. I am backing up the whole system to the second drive, and I am going to schedule Windows to do regular backups to the second drive. If I lose the first drive, I will have a full backup on the second. If I lose the second drive, I just need to replace that and create another backup. It's not as geeky as setting up a RAID would be, but it does the job I suppose.
After a couple of attempts to rebuild the RAID1 on my computer, I have come away with a few more grey hairs, and a renewed resolve not to bother trying again. Both drives are working now, albeit non-RAID, and I think that I shall keep it that way. I am backing up the whole system to the second drive, and I am going to schedule Windows to do regular backups to the second drive. If I lose the first drive, I will have a full backup on the second. If I lose the second drive, I just need to replace that and create another backup. It's not as geeky as setting up a RAID would be, but it does the job I suppose.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-02 05:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-02 07:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-02 08:24 pm (UTC)I know there's probably not much good to say about the dynamic drive handling available on Windows. There's certainly a performance hit over hardware based systems. But presuming you are running Windows, it may be an option for you. I've had a system here at the office working fine for nearly 3 years. (Although I also back up the mirrored stack to another PC...just in case. I try to keep at least three copies of all the critical data.)
no subject
Date: 2008-01-03 04:30 am (UTC)I considered rebuilding it and reinstalling Windows, but I figured it should be a pretty simple matter of just removing one drive from the RAID, cleaning it and moving it back in again. Removing it went smoothly, but the whole "add it back in again" part doesn't seem to be supported by this hardware.
I finally deleted the RAID entirely and am running as two independent drives. If I am faithful about making backups then it's all good IMO.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-03 04:34 am (UTC)I finally removed the second drive from the RAID, with the idea of adding them both back in again. That seems to want to work, except that I can't bring my self to click through the "WARNING: DOING THIS WILL DESTROY ALL DATA ON ALL OF YOUR DRIVES" part.
I've decided that if I really want to do a RAID, I'll buck up for a proper card rather than using this half-baked implementation on the motherboard.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-03 02:37 pm (UTC)Aren't computers fun?