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Forum Discussion
marcelser
May 29, 2018Aspirant
11TB (2TB + 2TB + 3TB + 4TB) results in 7.24TB in RAID0??? where does the space go?
Hi,
I just installed a new 4TB disk into my ReadNAS RN104 which already contained a 2 x 2TB + 3TB. When I check the net disk capacity it's 2 x 1.8, 2.4 and the new disk 3.6, total 9...
- May 30, 2018
marcelser wrote:
I played around more with the ReadyNAS calculator more and it turns out that mixed disks in RAID0 mode is not handled by any ReadyNAS in a useful way.
I believe that with the 6.9.3 you can manually create RAID groups using the extra space on the larger disks, and then concatenate them to the existing volume. Though it's not as automated as it might be, you should still be able to do it.
The guide here might help - https://www.netgear.com/images/support/WP_ReadyNAS%20FlexRAID%20Optimization%20Guide_18May17.pdf
StephenB
May 29, 2018Guru - Experienced User
What firmware are you running?
Can you tell us more precisely what steps you took? For example, did you
- insert the 4 TB disk
- delete the existing volume
- create a new RAID-0 volume that spanned all disks
Or did you do something else?
- marcelserMay 29, 2018AspirantI'm Running OS Version 6.9.3
As for the steps I tried 2 different attempts.
1) put in new disk, deleted volume, formatted disks (getting an error on the disk where the os was installed that it cannot be formatted). Then created single RAID0 volume spanning all disks which created 7.26TB volume.
2) I installed just the new 4TB disk started it which caused a firmware reset and os install on the new disk. After initial boot was complete I shutted down, put the other 3 disks back in and powered on. Then completed setup wizard, switched from x-raid to Flex-raid, deleted the initial volume the setup wizard created, formatted the old 3 disks and again created raid0 volume spanning all disks still ending up with a volume size of 7.26TB.
Any ideas?- mdgm-ntgrMay 29, 2018NETGEAR Employee Retired
Can you send in your logs (see the Sending Logs link in my sig)?
Why not just use X-RAID?
If you're after the performance benefits of a spanned RAID-0 volume I would have suggested getting a more powerful ReadyNAS.
With a spanned RAID-0 volume if a single disk fails all data is lost.
- marcelserMay 30, 2018AspirantHi,
Thanks for the support.
Actually the RN104 is just my backup device. So I sync the contents of my synology to it through rsync weekly. So I don't need performance or reliability, but max. capacity so it matches (equals or exceeds) the size of the synology ds418. But as its now, the device has 2TB more disk space but volume capacity is still less then the synology.
As for X-Raid, I always thought that X-Raid can not span across differently sized disks? Am I mistaken? Will send you the logs once I'm back home
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