On 4/26/04 3:25 PM, "Glen Parker" <glenebob@nwlink.com> wrote: > Sounds an aweful lot like RAID level one :-) Why would a DB system need to > do what RAID already does quite well? One case I can think of is where the shadow is on a separate system (e.g. a SAN or NetApps, another linux box, etc.). RAID doesn't protect you against certain types of hardware failure. We recently lost a RAID 5 due to a double disk failure. We've had high end boxes lose a RAID when just one disk went out (theoretically shouldn't happen) - apparently when the disk died it caused corruption elsewhere. I have also seen (a couple of times) a controller go bad and proceed to write garbage all over the disks. The mirroring worked quite well - we had a very nice file system full of mirrored garbage. Of course, none of these protect you against an errant application that did a 'delete from' instead of 'delete from where'... Wes ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to majordomo@postgresql.org so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly