On Fri, February 27, 2015 10:00 pm, Marko Vojinovic wrote: > On Fri, 27 Feb 2015 19:24:57 -0800 > John R Pierce <pierce@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 2/27/2015 4:52 PM, Khemara Lyn wrote: >> > >> > What is the right way to recover the remaining PVs left? >> >> take a filing cabinet packed full of 10s of 1000s of files of 100s of >> pages each, with the index cards interleaved in the files, and >> remove 1/4th of the pages in the folders, including some of the >> indexes... and toss everything else on the floor... this is what >> you have. 3 out of 4 pages, semi-randomly with no idea whats what. > > And this is why I don't like LVM to begin with. If one of the drives > dies, you're screwed not only for the data on that drive, but even for > data on remaining healthy drives. > > I never really saw the point of LVM. Storing data on plain physical > partitions, having an intelligent directory structure and a few wise > well-placed symlinks across the drives can go a long way in having > flexible storage, which is way more robust than LVM. With today's huge > drive capacities, I really see no reason to adjust the sizes of > partitions on-the-fly, and putting several TB of data in a single > directory is just Bad Design to begin with. > > That said, if you have a multi-TB amount of critical data while not > having at least a simple RAID-1 backup, you are already standing in a > big pile of sh*t just waiting to become obvious, regardless of LVM and > stuff. Hardware fails, and storing data without a backup is just simply > a disaster waiting to happen. > Indeed. That is why: no LVMs in my server room. Even no software RAID. Software RAID relies on the system itself to fulfill its RAID function; what if kernel panics before software RAID does its job? Hardware RAID (for huge filesystems I can not afford to back up) is what only makes sense for me. RAID controller has dedicated processors and dedicated simple system which does one simple task: RAID. Just my $0.02 Valeri ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Valeri Galtsev Sr System Administrator Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics University of Chicago Phone: 773-702-4247 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos