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Forum Discussion
Dann0
Dec 13, 2018Aspirant
How to replace a failed RAID5 X-raid drive in a 6 drive array
I have an RN31600 with 6 IronWolf 10TB drives in a RAID5 with X-raid. One of the 5 yr warranty drives has failed after 22 months. The system shows degraded. I have the replacement drive. What are the...
- Dec 13, 2018
unless there are other issues at hand, the normal procedure is to hot pull the defective drive (make absolute sure you have the correct one), then put the replacement drive into the caddy and hot insert it into the nas.
The nas should detect the new drive, run a quick disk test, then start rebuilding the array.
Do be advised, that the rebuild process is a lot of activity so it will both reduce performance of the nas during the rebuild, and due to the workload put extra stress on all of the drives.
So you should be sure you have a separate backup copy of any critical data, because if during a rebuild another drive should fail, then you will probably lose ALL data on the array.
In the future, you might want to consider the extra safety of raid 6/dual redundancy.
TeknoJnky
Dec 13, 2018Hero
unless there are other issues at hand, the normal procedure is to hot pull the defective drive (make absolute sure you have the correct one), then put the replacement drive into the caddy and hot insert it into the nas.
The nas should detect the new drive, run a quick disk test, then start rebuilding the array.
Do be advised, that the rebuild process is a lot of activity so it will both reduce performance of the nas during the rebuild, and due to the workload put extra stress on all of the drives.
So you should be sure you have a separate backup copy of any critical data, because if during a rebuild another drive should fail, then you will probably lose ALL data on the array.
In the future, you might want to consider the extra safety of raid 6/dual redundancy.
Dann0
Dec 13, 2018Aspirant
TeknoJnky wrote:
unless there are other issues at hand, the normal procedure is to hot pull the defective drive (make absolute sure you have the correct one), then put the replacement drive into the caddy and hot insert it into the nas.
The nas should detect the new drive, run a quick disk test, then start rebuilding the array.
Do be advised, that the rebuild process is a lot of activity so it will both reduce performance of the nas during the rebuild, and due to the workload put extra stress on all of the drives.
So you should be sure you have a separate backup copy of any critical data, because if during a rebuild another drive should fail, then you will probably lose ALL data on the array.
In the future, you might want to consider the extra safety of raid 6/dual redundancy.
Rest assured - If I lose another one of these drives only 22 months into a 60 month warranty, my beef will be with Seagate and the cost of ownership of these IronWolf drives. Thank you for the answer. "Hot swap the new drive in and keep my fingers crossed for about 24 hours".
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