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Forum Discussion
Weaverita
Sep 23, 2015Apprentice
Switching my disc configuration to user FEWER but LARGER drives
I currently have an RN114 ReadyNAS that is currently loaded with 4 x 2TB drives for a total space of 6TB using XRAID. I would like to change this configuration to use 2 x 6TB drives without having t...
Weaverita
Sep 23, 2015Apprentice
I mispoke, my ReadyNAS unit is the RN314xx (not RN104). Does your answer apply to the RN314 as well?
Assuming the answer also appies to the RN314, this seems like a reasonable feature request for the ReadyNAS team... no? It would be quite useful for those administrators who are trying to migrate to fewer but larger drives (or larger but fewer drives - depending on your point of view). It would allow your administrator to make this change in real time without having to take an array down.
Make sense?
StephenB
Sep 23, 2015Guru - Experienced User
Weaverita wrote:
I mispoke, my ReadyNAS unit is the RN314xx (not RN104). Does your answer apply to the RN314 as well?
Yes
Assuming the answer also appies to the RN314, this seems like a reasonable feature request for the ReadyNAS team... no?
It would be a nice feature, but it would be extremely difficult to do.
- mdgm-ntgrSep 24, 2015NETGEAR Employee Retired
Shrinking volumes is inherently more risky than expanding them and not something we would be likely to consider.
- bullfrog1Sep 25, 2015Tutor
My suggestion would be to do the following.
Copy all your data to one of the 6TB drives. A good program for this is "beyond compare", as you can check it has copied correctly.
Power down NAS - remove the 4 disks, insert the other new 6TB disk.
Setup NAS with single disk
Copy data from the first 6TB disk to the NAS.
Wipe 1st 6TB disk that contained your copied data and physically insert into NAS.
It will then mirror.
If the whole thing goes pear shaped you can go back to the beginning , with your 4 disks back in the NAS.
Bullfrog
- StephenBSep 25, 2015Guru - Experienced User
bullfrog1 wrote:
My suggestion would be to do the following.
Copy all your data to one of the 6TB drives. A good program for this is "beyond compare", as you can check it has copied correctly.
Power down NAS - remove the 4 disks, insert the other new 6TB disk.
Setup NAS with single disk
Copy data from the first 6TB disk to the NAS.
Wipe 1st 6TB disk that contained your copied data and physically insert into NAS.
It will then mirror.
If the whole thing goes pear shaped you can go back to the beginning , with your 4 disks back in the NAS.
Bullfrog
This would work. Alternatively he could simply replace two of the existing drives with 6TB ones, and would end up with a 10 TB volume (2x6TB+2x2TB).
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