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Whats the general consensus on RAID5 reliability? The Highpoint card doesnt support RAID6 so Ive been thinking of moving to RAID50 for a little extra reliability. Whats the feeling on it? Worth losing the extra storage of a 2nd drive?
My music archive went down a few days ago. I had everything backed up (and even the backups were backed up) but going RAID1 with an external backup of that was a tremendous amount of wasted space. I had close to 2TB of FLAC files but was taking up 6TB of space and everything was housed on separate drives and a small pain to manage. I sold off my old drives and was going to invest in some 1TB drives but the price point just isnt there yet so I went with 750's. I was stuck with my existing RAID before because I could not rebuild/expand it without losing everything (software RAID), this time around I went hardware RAID.
As I mentioned I went hardware RAID this time and invested in a decent RAID controller with online capacity expansion and online RAID level migration. (heres the card http://www.highpoint-tech.com/USA/rr2340.htm). Whats the general consensus on RAID5 reliability? The Highpoint card doesnt support RAID6 so Ive been thinking of moving to RAID50 for a little extra reliability. Whats the feeling on it? Worth losing the extra storage of a 2nd drive?
How do you guys have your music sorted? I had it split on to drives (A-F, I-N, etc etc), but its not ideal. Having them all in one folder seems a little easier but scrolling through a few thousand CD's at a time would get old fast I imagine. Maybe I dont have a choice
It's not the reliability of RAID5 that's the question, it's the reliability of drives. With RAID5, when a drive files and you replace it, it has to to a lot of math and I/O processing to fill the replaced drive with the proper data. In the world of very large SATA drives, this can take a LONG time. The risk is that sometime during the rebuild, another drive will fail and you'll lose everything. Thus, RAID 6 has been gaining popularity, allowing you to lose two drives without losing all of your data.
If you have backups then RAID is almost a complete wast of money and drive space. What RAID enables you to do is to keep on running in the event of a hard disk failure. Read that sentence again - it does NOT protect your data in any way. It protects your UP TIME.
It's great for corporate data, where a company cannot afford to have their data systems go down for a few days or even a few hours. The systems must run 24x7, disk failures and all. Ask yourself, how important that is for your use? If your music library were offline for a day or two while you installed a replacement drive and restored from your backup, is that such an inconvenience that it's worth spending hundreds of extra dollars to avoid? Thankfully, for myself, I can say I'd live through it without much trama.
If you still feel the need for RAID, then with your storage needs, RAID1 really isn't feasible. RAID5 (or RAID6 if you want to spend even more money) is the only choice. RAID50 will give you greater _PERFORMANCE_, but at double the cost in drives and nearly double the cost in controllers. Probably the last thing you need to be buying is more performance for the lowly needs of a music server.
I organize my library by artist, A-M on one drive, N-Z on another. It might be a little nicer to have it all on one drive, but not much. That's probably the one nice thing about RAID5 - you can create gigantic drive spaces that can be be many times larger than that available on a single drive.
For RAID5 you need at least three drives, so you'll need at least a four drive SATA RAID controller. Expect to spend $300-400 for a good controller of that capacity. The 3ware 9650 series is nice, in that they use fast, low power Intel controller chips that don't need a fan, so it's one less thing to fail.http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16816116042
Id like to get away from having backups and just have the ability to grow my available space but be able to retain data in the case of a drive failure.
Retaining a backup is costing me too much because Im having to pay for twice the storage.