James Bensley wrote: > > I have some questions regarding a new home server I am going to build > in the hopefully very near future (ASAP, I just need to finish > planning everything and this is the penultimate hurdle), I will be > creating a software RAID... > > Lets say I have three drives "knocking" around which are all 1TB SATA > II drives but each made by a different manufacturer. I am going to > guess that these couldn't be used in a RAID 5? Or could they? > > However could a similar result of 2TBs of data with redundancy be > achieved with JBOD? If you use software raid to combine the JBOD's, yes. > Also regarding RAID 5, three drives of data to one for parity is the > max ratio I believe? I.e. to expand this by adding another data drive, > the original parity drive would no longer cover this and another would > be required, is this correct? Yes, but if I were doing it I'd either run 2 drives in RAID1 or get another drive and either have 2 RAID1 mount points or a RAID 0+1. The advantage of RAID1 is that you can recover the data from any single disk and it still runs full speed even with a missing disk. RAID5 works but there is a performance hit and a big one when a disk is bad. > One more question about hot swappable drives, I understand that you > can create RAID arrays with and without hot swappable drives but I am > confused by this concept. I'm my experience with RAIDs I have only > every delt with a RAID 1 that has degraded. I simply set the drive as > offline, replaced it, set it to online and the RAID rebuilt itself all > without restart the server and operation was never interrupted. So we > can presume the server had hot swappable drives enabled yes? (It was a > hardware RAID). With a software RAID is this still achievable? Sata drives all but a few controllers are designed to be hot swappable but you need a special drive bay that permits swapping. It probably doesn't matter for a home server where you can shut it down for repair anyway. With software raid, after the drive is recognized (either hotswap or reboot) you need to fdisk a matching partition and then use an 'mdadm --add ...' command to sync a new drive into the raid. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos