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Forum Discussion
creifle
Apr 18, 2020Guide
Can I format a previously formatted disk while an xraid volume is in place?
My ReadyNAS 316 contains 2 8TB and 4 4TB drives running X-RAID. All WD Enterprise class drives from the NG Compatibility List. Drive #6 (4TB) began reallocation sector errors which began to increase...
- Apr 18, 2020
Yes, you can replace the failed 4TB with the previously removed 4TB. BUT, if your data is inaccessable, it probably won't help. If your volume is reported as "degraded", then it will. It sounds. however, that you had a second drive fail, in which case the volume will be shown as "dead", and you are in a data recovery situation. That's going to cost, and it's likely not going to be 100% successful. Your recovery options are paid support from Netgear or hookling the drives up to a PC and running ReclaiMe software. Both will require a location to offload the data so you can later destroy the old volume, create a new one, and put the recovered data back.
Of course, if you have a backup (and I assume you would probably not be here asking if you did), you can replace the bad drives, factory default, and restore data from backup.
If the volume is just degraded, you really should think about making a backup before you proceed. Volume re-sync is drive intensive, and any drive close to failure has a higher chance during it. Then, the best way to proceed is to swap the drive with power on, especially for a previously formatted drive. The NAS will tell you you removed and then inserted the drive, and will complain the "new" one has data on it. At that point, you select it and click "format". Don't format it outside the NAS first, it won't help. But you can remove all partitions and avoid the format step when it's inserted in the NAS if you choose.
BTW, the data on the drive from the previous installation on the NAS, it isn't usable since it's an incomplete part of a RAID array..
StephenB
Apr 19, 2020Guru - Experienced User
creifle wrote:
I then considered performing a FACTORY DEFAULT with the replacement drive in place only. But some nagging voice in me said, "Don't do it." I was concerned that the NAS (diskless) still had some configuration with the 5 good RAID volumes and if I FACTORY DEFAULT, there would be a problem when I migrated the 5 back into place (correct order, of course.)
True or False?
All the NAS configuration info is stored on the hard drives. There is a small (4GB) OS partition on each drive - configured as RAID-1 (all drives mirrored). The system boots from that partition. So the answer is false.
The NAS should have let you reformat the drive. Likely it was confused since the drive was once part of the array. If you can connect it to a PC, you could reformat it there (And then reformat again when you hot-insert it into the NAS). If you do a factory default with only that drive in place, I suggest switching to flexraid and destorying the data volume before shutting the NAS down. Then restore all the other drives in place in their slots (leaving the slot for the replacement empty). Then power up the NAS and hot-insert the replacement drive after the boot is complete. You might still need to format it though.
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