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Forum Discussion
Laserbait
Jun 30, 2020Luminary
Failed disk
Hello all, I have a RN316 with a EDA500. There are 2 volumes, one on the RN316 and one on the EDA500. I had a disk fail in the RN316, and I would like to take a disk out of the EDA500 and pu...
Marc_V
Jun 30, 2020NETGEAR Employee Retired
Not really sure if the system will recognize the drive as part of the EDA500 volume. IMO it would be best to reformat the drive before using it or destroy the volume on the EDA500 and then use it to replace the failed drive.
HTH
Regards
- StephenBJun 30, 2020Guru - Experienced User
I agree you shouldn't just move it.
Instead try connecting it to a PC first - either with SATA or a USB adapter/dock. Ideally you'd unformat it (deleting the partitions in windows disk manager, or zeroing the disk with seatools). You could reformat it instead - and then reformat it again when you put it in the NAS.
But given the glacial "speed" of resyncing a EDA500 array, I'd get a new disk for the NAS instead. But don't get a DM drive (many of the newer ones have changed over to SMR). Instead get an Ironwolf.
- LaserbaitJun 30, 2020Luminary
Thanks all,
Because the data on the EDA500 is trivial , I yanked one of the EDA500 disks, and deleted the partitions from a windows box. I dropped it into the RN316, and it started rebuilding right away.
I'll be getting 2 Ironwolf drives next week, one for a replacement into the EDA500, and one as a cold spare for the next one that fails. :)
This is another instance where being able to move a share (and it's settings) between volumes would be a very useful. I'd also love to be able to convert from RAID 5 to RAID 6 without having to nuke the volumes first.
- SandsharkJun 30, 2020Sensei - Experienced User
Laserbait wrote:Thanks all,
This is another instance where being able to move a share (and it's settings) between volumes would be a very useful. I'd also love to be able to convert from RAID 5 to RAID 6 without having to nuke the volumes first.
I wonder if you can create a ReadyDR backup to another volume (using IP address of 127.0.0.1 as the destination) and then clone that? I may have to put that on my list of experiments to try.
As to converting RAID5 to RAID6, you can, if you have an empty slot. Otherwise, it reduces the volume size, and ReadyNASOS does not support any volume size reductions, likely because there are just too many variables.
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