Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/08/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]A bit late but here is my experience. The hard rule I learned from building and running a startup's I/T infrastructure a few years ago on a shoe string budget is never ever trust a single box doesn't matter how nice the box is. It is a single point of failure. Disk life is fairly good these days but they do fail. RAID5 is a reasonable compromise but you should have 2 separate disks. One of which should remain offline and disconnected if at all possible. For that small startup, I had a main file server with redundant disks internally that kept all the user data. I also had a PC under my desk onto which I took hourly snapshots of all the data from the server (just because I was paranoid and I *know* Murphy was not my friend). One day, the server crashed hard and when I went to have a look, the motherboard died. Either Northbridge or Southbridge chip had fried and scribbled over all the disks in the server in its death throes. My backup-to-the-backup copy became a slightly stale master copy all the sudden and I lost the use of my PC for a few days. Paranoia was justified. :) I agree with those who says the OS should not be part of the RAID array if for no other reasons other than that RAID5 recovery can take a long, long, long time. If you have a deadline, the last thing you want to do is to sit there and wait, and wait, and wait, and pray that the OS can be recovered so you can actually boot your PC.... Regards, Spencer