--- On Fri, 5/2/08, Kasper Sandberg <lkml@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > From: Kasper Sandberg <lkml@xxxxxxxxxxx> > Subject: Re: Sharing disks amoung multiple software RAIDs > To: "David Greaves" <david@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > Cc: "David Rees" <drees76@xxxxxxxxx>, "David Lethe" <david@xxxxxxxxxxxx>, alex14641@xxxxxxxxx, "Justin Piszcz" <jpiszcz@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, linux-raid@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, linux-kernel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Date: Friday, May 2, 2008, 5:43 PM > On Fri, 2008-05-02 at 09:25 +0100, David Greaves wrote: > > Kasper Sandberg wrote: > > > Im not treating it as a backup, what i want, is > to make sure that if 1 > > > disk dies, the data is still intact and ill > hopefully be able to run > > > with 1 disk till the newly ordered one arrives > > Probably one of the main design objectives behind > RAID/md > > Exactly, but once people start saying: "Look how many > problems people > post to the thread on > a weekly basis where people lose their data when md > rebuilds go bad with > non-shared disks" i begin to worry.. > > > > > > So my question remains.. Is md raid1 not suited > for this need? would it > > > be safer to run in non-raid1 mode and daily(maybe > hourly) rsync > > > everything over to the second disk? > > > > md is 100% guaranteed perfect or your money back... > > rsync is 100% guaranteed perfect or your money back... > > your backups are 100% guaranteed perfect or your money > back... > > your hard drives are 100% guaranteed perfect or your > money back... > > your CPU and RAM are 100% guaranteed perfect or your > money back... > > your CPU and PSU fans are 100% guaranteed perfect or > your money back... > > > > Clearly if you want to panic over reliability you have > lots of choices :) > > I do not wish to panic, i merely wished to know if linux MD > is believed > to work in most cases, or believed to do all sorts of weird > stuff when > resyncing :) > > > > > David > > PS, FWIW md has saved my data* countless times over > the past 'n' years in > > exactly the scenario you describe. > > It has also been useful to people i know, i just wished to > be sure :) > and as Keld Jørn Simonsen and Helge Hafting's comments > seems to confirm, > linux md IS nice and stable :) > > and as said, what im looking for isnt an in-box backup > solution, merely > safety in case one disk burns :) > > > > > *(or more accurately has saved me from having to > restore my data) Just to add another data point, I've been using md in RAID 5 configuration for ~3 years with dedicated USB and SATA disks (not mixed) and have had disks go bad, and have yet to lose any data. Given the 'quality' of high-capacity disks nowadays, RAIDing them is the right thing to do. ____________________________________________________________________________________ Be a better friend, newshound, and know-it-all with Yahoo! Mobile. Try it now. http://mobile.yahoo.com/;_ylt=Ahu06i62sR8HDtDypao8Wcj9tAcJ -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-raid" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html