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MathemAddicts's avatar
May 22, 2020
Solved

Removed Drive (Degraded Volume). Will It Balance?

I purposefully removed one of the drives from my RN316 because I am transitioning to a newer server and need the drives. My RN316 now has a "degraded volume." My question is, will the RN316 eventually spread out the data evenly among the remaining 5 drives (given that there is plenty of space on the entire volume) to eventually become a redundant array again? Or, is there a way I can force this?


  • StephenB wrote:

    MathemAddicts wrote:

    My question is, will the RN316 eventually spread out the data evenly among the remaining 5 drives (given that there is plenty of space on the entire volume) to eventually become a redundant array again? 


    No.


     Well, actually yes.  It will spread the data out among the drives of the  non-redundant array.  It will not re-structure the RAID to use only the remaining drives and regain redundancy (and lose capacity), which is what StephenB thinks you really mean (and you probably do).

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  • StephenB's avatar
    StephenB
    Guru - Experienced User

    MathemAddicts wrote:

    My question is, will the RN316 eventually spread out the data evenly among the remaining 5 drives (given that there is plenty of space on the entire volume) to eventually become a redundant array again? 


    No.

     


    MathemAddicts wrote:

     Or, is there a way I can force this?


    It can be done with SSH, and there are some posts here that outline the process.

     

    It's not something you should attempt w/o a full backup of the files.

     

     

    • Sandshark's avatar
      Sandshark
      Sensei - Experienced User

      StephenB wrote:

      MathemAddicts wrote:

      My question is, will the RN316 eventually spread out the data evenly among the remaining 5 drives (given that there is plenty of space on the entire volume) to eventually become a redundant array again? 


      No.


       Well, actually yes.  It will spread the data out among the drives of the  non-redundant array.  It will not re-structure the RAID to use only the remaining drives and regain redundancy (and lose capacity), which is what StephenB thinks you really mean (and you probably do).

      • MathemAddicts's avatar
        MathemAddicts
        Tutor

        Okay, so in any case, the only way to regain redundancy is to insert another drive, correct? Does it have to be a drive of the same size as was removed (6 TB)? Or can I insert a smaller drive (1.5 TB) and still get redundancy? Note: I have only used 10 TB of the 36 TB originally in the server.

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