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Forum Discussion
Caso
May 09, 2016Aspirant
Failed disk on readynas RN104 JBOD
Hello, I've a readynas RN104 with 4 disks (3Tb, 1Tb, 2Tb and 1Tb). All of these drives are using the JBOD system to have only one volume. I'm receiving alerts to my e-mail telling me that the 4th...
- May 10, 2016
Ok. This is in fact RAID-0, with a total volume capacity of 7 TB.
This is a very fragile mode - if any disk fails you lose all the data in the volume. Anyone using this mode needs to be very careful about backups.
So you should definitely back up the whole volume right away. I suggest getting a new 3 TB drive, and creating a new XRAID volume. You'll lose a little capacity, but disk replacement will be easier in the future.
And keep your backups up to date.
Caso wrote:
If I remove the sick drive, will I only lose the data of this drive or the whole file system integrity will be corrupted?
As noted above, you lose everything.
Retired_Member
May 09, 2016
Caso wrote:4 disks, using the JBOD system to have only one volume
With Flex-RAID, it's possible to have a single JBOD volume built on several drives. If that's the case, then you're gonna have to clone the drive as JBOD does NOT offer any redundancy (be sure you know what you're doing before attempting anything, you CAN lose it all)
If you're using X-RAID, then you have one disk redundancy.
In any case, you should always have a backup (but yeah, if you have a drive that's starting to fail, it's the right moment to update your backup).
If you have a single JBOD, with 2x1TB + 1x2TB + 1x3TB, the capacity of the volume should be about 6-7TB. If you're running X-RAID, it should be around 4TB.
Can you post a screenshot of your volume config (System / Volumes)?
- StephenBMay 09, 2016Guru - Experienced User
jak0lantash wrote:
With Flex-RAID, it's possible to have a single JBOD volume built on several drives.No. You can create a RAID-0 array that spans multiple drives, but that is not JBOD. When we say "JBOD" we mean each disk using its own volume.
I think the OP is using XRAID, since he says "3.7 TB volume", which is exactly what he would see using XRAID with the disk sizes he specifies.
- CasoMay 10, 2016Aspirant
Hello,
Here is a screen shot of the volume page (sorry, I 'm French and so the system is in French and I forgot to switch it to English before capturing the screen)
- StephenBMay 10, 2016Guru - Experienced User
Ok. This is in fact RAID-0, with a total volume capacity of 7 TB.
This is a very fragile mode - if any disk fails you lose all the data in the volume. Anyone using this mode needs to be very careful about backups.
So you should definitely back up the whole volume right away. I suggest getting a new 3 TB drive, and creating a new XRAID volume. You'll lose a little capacity, but disk replacement will be easier in the future.
And keep your backups up to date.
Caso wrote:
If I remove the sick drive, will I only lose the data of this drive or the whole file system integrity will be corrupted?
As noted above, you lose everything.
- CasoMay 10, 2016Aspirant
Thank you very much for your answer Stephen.
Now I know that running a backup is mandatory because I have no chance to keep my data...
I will think about changing the RAID configuration to avoid this kind of problem in the future.
- CasoMay 10, 2016Aspirant
Hello,
As you can see, I'm not using X-RAID and my 4 disks are gathered into one single volume of about 7Tb.
I was just wondering if there was a way to identify the data stored on the sick disk so that I would have only to make a backup of these files and preserve the integrity of the data spread other the 3 healthy disks.
Do not using any redundancy was a choice I made in order to preserve the maximum capacity and also because my disk configuration was heterogeneous: I bought my ReadyNas system a long time after I bought the disks which were connected with a USB to a old machine working as a data server.
I've already made a backup of the critical data, but it would be a pitty to loose the remaining data just because of one small disk of 1Tb whereas I've so much free space...
If I remove the sick drive, will I only loose the data of this drive or the whole file system integrity will be corrupted?
I'm afraid that the only way will be to run a backup, but I'll have to find more than 3Tb of free space on my computers! :manfrustrated:
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