Setting up a raid. (NLC).
Setting up a raid. (NLC).
Can anyone tell me if this is a good idea, or an utter futile waste of time.
My desktop HDD is toast (they shouldn't make beeping noises should they) taking with it some data (just photos) as I am incapable of backing up disks, despite having Norton ghost which will do it automatically.
So as my PC flashes up something about RAIDs every time it starts I thought I could set up a raid array, so the data gets backed up automatically!
Is it possible to have 2 disks on raid (SATA I guess, the old one were IDE but there are some empty pink plugs on the board marked SATA) and a third on IDE on it's own. (So I could have 2 disks on RAID holding data and one on IDE running the OS).
Is that a stupid idea?
My desktop HDD is toast (they shouldn't make beeping noises should they) taking with it some data (just photos) as I am incapable of backing up disks, despite having Norton ghost which will do it automatically.
So as my PC flashes up something about RAIDs every time it starts I thought I could set up a raid array, so the data gets backed up automatically!
Is it possible to have 2 disks on raid (SATA I guess, the old one were IDE but there are some empty pink plugs on the board marked SATA) and a third on IDE on it's own. (So I could have 2 disks on RAID holding data and one on IDE running the OS).
Is that a stupid idea?
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- BiggestNizzy
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Erm - being a railway bod and not much into computers and stuff - but the beeping noise - isn't that indicative of a motherboard failure? The HDD might be sound and it's the MB that's gone T.U.????
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Yes, it's possible to have a RAID array full of data and an IDE drive on it's own and use both at the same time. If it was me I wouldn't bother with the IDE drive on it's own at all and just put everything on the array. You could always use the IDE drive in an external thing and follow Sanjoy's suggestion for backing up.
Like Sanjoy says, RAID only kind of works as a backup solution. It will protect you from a hardware failure of a single drive but won't protect you from getting nicked/exploded or you making a mistake
If you delete a bunch of irreplaceable family photographs the delete operation will be replicated perfectly to both disks in the array.
Like Sanjoy says, RAID only kind of works as a backup solution. It will protect you from a hardware failure of a single drive but won't protect you from getting nicked/exploded or you making a mistake

Re: Setting up a raid. (NLC).
is the beeping in a regular pattern like an error code? It probably is. You should be able to find a schedule on the 'net to decode what your motherboard is telling you.pete wrote:My desktop HDD is toast (they shouldn't make beeping noises should they) taking with it some data (just photos) as I am incapable of backing up disks, despite having Norton ghost which will do it automatically.
- steve_weegie
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ironside wrote:Yes, it's possible to have a RAID array full of data and an IDE drive on it's own and use both at the same time. If it was me I wouldn't bother with the IDE drive on it's own at all and just put everything on the array. You could always use the IDE drive in an external thing and follow Sanjoy's suggestion for backing up.
Like Sanjoy says, RAID only kind of works as a backup solution. It will protect you from a hardware failure of a single drive but won't protect you from getting nicked/exploded or you making a mistakeIf you delete a bunch of irreplaceable family photographs the delete operation will be replicated perfectly to both disks in the array.

Raid only does 2 things - protect you from losing data after a failed hard disk and speed up the disk subsystem in certain configurations.
External disks are all very well and good, except they suffer from failure and file system corruption just like any other drives. There really is NO substitute for taking either DVD, tape or offsite backups.
By all means, setup your raid - 2 disks mirrored (RAID 1) if you're looking for fault tolerance, or 2 disks striped (RAID 0) if you're looking for ultimate performance, but dont rely on it for long term backups.....
If you go ahead, watch out for the boot order between your RAID and IDE disks.... You might find that the PC tries to boot up from the SATA RAID controller instead of the IDE drive with yoyur OS on it... There's probably a boot device order thing in the BIOS that you'll need to change to get this to work ok....
Cheers,
Steve
Arriving broadside, in a cloud of smoke......
The best backed up memory is the one between the ears 
If it doesn't fit in there, it's probably not worth keeping anyway.
Almost all PC RAID solutions are a s/w bodge; with windows getting less reliable than hard drives, you're really risking disaster with a s/w RAID approach.
True h/w RAID tends to be slow and expensive.
I tend to think the most reliable storage is these little network attached jobs, some of which implement a RAID strategy, but in any case you can easily manage two of them. The h/w in them is no more reliable than your PC, but the s/w usually is
Cheers,
Robin

If it doesn't fit in there, it's probably not worth keeping anyway.
Almost all PC RAID solutions are a s/w bodge; with windows getting less reliable than hard drives, you're really risking disaster with a s/w RAID approach.
True h/w RAID tends to be slow and expensive.
I tend to think the most reliable storage is these little network attached jobs, some of which implement a RAID strategy, but in any case you can easily manage two of them. The h/w in them is no more reliable than your PC, but the s/w usually is

Cheers,
Robin
I is in your loomz nibblin ur wirez
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- steve_weegie
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Re: Setting up a raid. (NLC).
Can you describe the "beeping" noise? When disks die, they generally make rattly sounds, or sounds like grinding things with an angle grinder!pete wrote:
My desktop HDD is toast (they shouldn't make beeping noises should they) taking with it some data (just photos) as I am incapable of backing up disks, despite having Norton ghost which will do it automatically.
You 100% sure the beeping is coming from the disk and not the motherboard??
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I used to love RAID systems... made my life simpler at Sky. Loads of IVR's running SCO unix, data being striped over 3 disks (using 1 for parity).
If you lost a disk in the middle of the day, the system would stay up as the data was across all 3 disks.... and you could hot swap it mid-day so it would rebuild itself all whilst still giving callers the treatment... Saved a lot of "WHY HAS OUR SYSTEM GONE DOWN!!" shouts in my direction.
Thank F*ck
If you lost a disk in the middle of the day, the system would stay up as the data was across all 3 disks.... and you could hot swap it mid-day so it would rebuild itself all whilst still giving callers the treatment... Saved a lot of "WHY HAS OUR SYSTEM GONE DOWN!!" shouts in my direction.
Thank F*ck
I have no signature.
Re: Setting up a raid. (NLC).
Errrm. Oh bugger. Was sure - now less sure.steve_weegie wrote:Can you describe the "beeping" noise? When disks die, they generally make rattly sounds, or sounds like grinding things with an angle grinder!pete wrote:
My desktop HDD is toast (they shouldn't make beeping noises should they) taking with it some data (just photos) as I am incapable of backing up disks, despite having Norton ghost which will do it automatically.
You 100% sure the beeping is coming from the disk and not the motherboard??
Will investigate tomorrow.
Pete
(needed more storage anyway and the 2 new HDDs I've ordered I will use...)
'99 - '03 Titanium S1 111S.
'03 - '10 Starlight Black S2 111S
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'03 - '10 Starlight Black S2 111S
'11 - '17 S2 135R
'17 - '19 S2 Exige S+
'23 - ?? Evora