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Since I've started burning my CDs into FLAC, I've quickly outstripped my ability to backup my main hard drive to my second hard drive. I had planned on just buying two new hard drives, one for operating system/data and one for backup. I was going to perform a disk copy using software I have (the name of which has temporarily escaped me), then replace my C: with the new drive and backup the new drive with the nameless software. As I went to buy the drives from Newegg, though, I saw this:[url]http://ww ...
There are many ways you can approach this. This is what I would do:Leave the OS where it is. Placing your OS on RAID1 may not be a good idea fo 2 reasons. 1) If your OS get's corrupted, it will replicate to the other drive. 2) Performance will be slower. If this is a file server, the performance penalty is neglible. Since availability and I/O subsystem is most important. Put data in RAID1.Buy an additional HDD (identical to the one you just bought) and configure it as RAID1. Move your music files to the new partition.Sit back and relax.
# 2 is not entirely accurate, you will get slower writes but faster reads. In the server world, we usually put the OS on a raid 1 partition and data on a raid 5.
In a server world you want to get as close to 99.999% availability. That means you have several fault tolerant in place not just 1, 2 or JBODs possibly more than one servers in a cluster . RAID 1 wil give you slight degradation of read performance; write performance will actually improve. Therefore, you will get the fault tolerant but not the ultimate in performance. You normally use RAID 1 and 5 for servers not workstations.Since this is a workstation, you want to have fast read and fast write all the time. RAID 1 will not give you that, hence "performance will be slower".
Levi,Supposedly read speed is faster for RAID 1 while write speed is about the same:http://www.prepressure.com/techno/raid.htmHowever, speed isn't my main issue, although having a speedier computer would be nice. I was looking more for ease of use -- the ability to backup OS, programs, and all data without too much trouble. Implementing data on the RAID means that my data is (automatically) backed up, but I'll still have to back up my OS/programs. And I've learned the hard way that losing an ...
Since I've started burning my CDs into FLAC, I've quickly outstripped my ability to backup my main hard drive to my second hard drive. I had planned on just buying two new hard drives, one for operating system/data and one for backup. I was going to perform a disk copy using software I have (the name of which has temporarily escaped me), then replace my C: with the new drive and backup the new drive with the nameless software. As I went to buy the drives from Newegg, though, I saw this:http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?Item=N82E16816116030#DetailSpecs
I'd recommend getting a relatively small hard disk for the operating system and programs, then two identical disks for your music library and its backup. Get an external USB enclosure for the backup disk and do your backups whenever you remember.