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Forum Discussion
DavidKino
Jul 01, 2016Aspirant
ReadyNAS 204 one disk's space is not shown
I have bought a new ReadyNAS204 and 2 SATA 3TB disks. The disks could be found in admin page but the space is not correct. It's now 1.59TB free of 2.72TB. It seems lost the other 3TB. Any suggest...
- Jul 05, 2016
Leia wrote:
But there's no data redundancy for RAID 0. So if one of your drive got failed, all your data would be lost.
I want to emphasize that when either drive fails you lose all the data on both drives. You can also create two volumes (one for each drive) which is a lot safer.
Leia wrote:
Actually if you get one more 3TB drive(must be 3TB at least), and still on XRAID mode, hot-insert the new 3TB drive into your box, you would have a 6TB RAID 5 volume then. RAID 5 volume also has redundancy.
This is generally the best configuration for most users. Fot the extra ~$100 US you get the ability to recover from single disk failures with no need to restore files, and also have the ability to expand the array with no need to restore files from backup.
You will still need a backup though, as RAID alone is not enough to keep your data safe.
Leia
Jul 05, 2016NETGEAR Employee Retired
If you disable "X-RAID" mode, and destory the volume and create a new volume with the 2 drives as RAID 0, you can get about 6TB free capacity. But there's no data redundancy for RAID 0. So if one of your drive got failed, all your data would be lost.
Actually if you get one more 3TB drive(must be 3TB at least), and still on XRAID mode, hot-insert the new 3TB drive into your box, you would have a 6TB RAID 5 volume then. RAID 5 volume also has redundancy.
StephenB
Jul 05, 2016Guru - Experienced User
Leia wrote:
But there's no data redundancy for RAID 0. So if one of your drive got failed, all your data would be lost.
I want to emphasize that when either drive fails you lose all the data on both drives. You can also create two volumes (one for each drive) which is a lot safer.
Leia wrote:
Actually if you get one more 3TB drive(must be 3TB at least), and still on XRAID mode, hot-insert the new 3TB drive into your box, you would have a 6TB RAID 5 volume then. RAID 5 volume also has redundancy.
This is generally the best configuration for most users. Fot the extra ~$100 US you get the ability to recover from single disk failures with no need to restore files, and also have the ability to expand the array with no need to restore files from backup.
You will still need a backup though, as RAID alone is not enough to keep your data safe.
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