NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.

Forum Discussion

ekot's avatar
ekot
Aspirant
Apr 26, 2022
Solved

How to copy data from the one harddrive to another within the same readynas?

Hi, I have a ReadyNas RND2D running firmware version 6.10.1 in X-Raid mode and I had only one 1TB drive inserted into it. Everything is working fine but my drive is almost full. So I purchased a new...
  • StephenB's avatar
    StephenB
    Apr 27, 2022

    ekot wrote:

     

    When I inserted my new 2 TB harddrive, it was synced for three days. What did it do? 

    If I understand correctly about your words "the second disk adds RAID redundancy (RAID-1 mirroring), not more space.", it means by that now the data from the old 1 TB has been copied over to the new 2 TB. Am I correct?

    The RAID-1 sync copied every sector of the 1 TB drive to the 2 TB drive - so they are now mirrored.  Anything written to the NAS now is written in parallel to both disks.

     

    Three days is quite a long time for a 1 TB sync - what model 2 TB disk did you purchase?

     


    ekot wrote:

     

    I have bought another 2 TB harddrive, do I need to restart or do anything in the admin page before opening the case and removing the old 1 TB to replace it with another 2 TB harddrive? I only have two harddrive slots in my NAS.

     

    My goal is to create 4 TB total storage, in my understanding I need to :

    1. First, copy the old 1 TB to new 2 TB

    2. Second, remove the old 1 TB replace it with another 2 TB

    3. Finally, expand the total storage to 4 TB

     

    Do I need flexraid for this? Sorry I am still a bit lost, thank you for your patience.

    If you are willing to settle for 2 TB of storage, then you can simply remove the 1 TB disk, and insert the 2 TB disk (with the NAS running).  The volume will resync, and then expand to 2 TB.  All data and settings would be preserved. The benefits of doing this are

    • You would have protection from a simple disk failure, thanks to the RAID-1 mirroring.  Note this doesn't mean you don't need a backup, as RAID volumes can sometimes fail.
    • Further expansion in the future would not require starting over with an empty volume.  Though you would have to purchase 2 larger disks every time you want to expand.
    • XRAID is simpler, so it doesn't require as much knowlege on how RAID works.

     

    If you want to create 4 TB of storage, then you need to use flexraid.  The process isn't the same as what you are thinking.  You'd first need to copy all your files to external storage (for instance a USB drive).  Then you'd need to switch to flexraid, and destroy your current volume.  At that point, your data and shares will be gone. Then upgrade the 1 TB drive to 2 TB.  The next step is to create new volume(s).  I'd recommend creating two 2 TB volumes (one for each disk), and then creating some shares on each.  Then restore your files from the external storage.

     

    While it is possible to create a single 4 TB volume with flexraid, I don't recommend that you do that.  The reason is that when a disk fails (which will eventually happen) then you will lose all the files in the volume.  If you create two 2 TB volumes, then when a disk fails you would only lose the files on that particular disk.

     

    Chapter 2 of the software manual gives more informaton on all of this:  https://www.downloads.netgear.com/files/GDC/READYNAS-100/READYNAS_OS_6_SM_EN.pdf

NETGEAR Academy

Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology! 

Join Us!

ProSupport for Business

Comprehensive support plans for maximum network uptime and business peace of mind.

 

Learn More