Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/08/02
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]2009-08-02-10:00:14 leo wesson: > a drobo formats it's drives in a drobo specific way, doesn't it? So that > means you are always committed to reading your drives in a drobo and they > can't be used in any other raid setup? so if your drobo toasts, you have > to > get another one to transfer your data? If drobo goes out of business, what > happens? 1) something like a Drobo (or a ReadyNAS, which I use) shouldn't be considered a final archive/backup solution. It's large-volume storage for stuff one currently works with, and should be more reliable than a single disk, but it, like any other working storage, should be backed up. To removable disk drives, or to tapes, or... whatever. But you can't count on absolute reliability in anything. So if down the line your Drobo (or whatever) dies, and you can't find another Drobo to stick your disks in... that should be fine, because you'd roll your data back in from your other backup medium. 2) FYI, with the ReadyNAS family (with which I'm more familiar): they always said that if you chose a traditional, standard RAID scheme (like RAID-5), if it ever became necessary to read the data without a ReadyNAS, if you could stuff the drives in a Linux box, its software RAID should recognise and properly interpret the drives and present your volume appropriately. This isn't the case if you use their proprietary "X-RAID", but the latter has some advanteges of its own (automagic migration into a larger volume if you replace disks with larger ones one by one; sensible utilization of some configurations with unequal-sized disks). So you can make your choice accordingly. I spent several years sternly insisting on keeping my ReadyNAS NV in RAID-5, and recently, when I migrated to a ReadyNAS Pro, just decided to go ahead and trust their weird but handy X-RAID. I don't know if there's an equivalent tradeoff you can make a choice about with a Drobo, but read the manual before you commit to moving all your stuff onto it. (Because changing underlying formats would probably require a scorch-and-repopulate).