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Forum Discussion
ravi926
Sep 12, 2022Aspirant
Replacement disk RR4360S
There is a disk which is going to fail (Detected increasing reallocated sector count), Do need to shutdown the system RR4360S and swap the drive or are the drives hot swappable ?
StephenB
Sep 12, 2022Guru - Experienced User
ravi926 wrote:
are the drives hot swappable ?
The drives are hot swappable.
ravi926
Sep 16, 2022Aspirant
Thanks, just curious to know during what situation we need to shutdown the array and replace, have read from one of the forums https://community.netgear.com/t5/Using-your-ReadyNAS-in-Business/Dead-volume-after-disc-replacement/td-p/1249309
- StephenBSep 16, 2022Guru - Experienced User
ravi926 wrote:
Thanks, just curious to know during what situation we need to shutdown the array and replace, have read from one of the forums https://community.netgear.com/t5/Using-your-ReadyNAS-in-Business/Dead-volume-after-disc-replacement/td-p/1249309
Normally you don't (fwiw I never have).
What RAID mode are you using for the volume the failing disk is in?
- SandsharkSep 16, 2022Sensei
The post you referenced has nothing to do with whether or not the NAS was shut down. No matter how you do it (power on or off), a replacement drive has to complete RAID sync. Depending on the RAID type, other failures during that process can kill the volume.
- StephenBSep 16, 2022Guru - Experienced User
Sandshark wrote:
The post you referenced has nothing to do with whether or not the NAS was shut down. No matter how you do it (power on or off), a replacement drive has to complete RAID sync. Depending on the RAID type, other failures during that process can kill the volume.
You are assuming RAID redundancy - hopefully ravi926's volume has that, but I thought it was worth confirming.
- ravi926Sep 19, 2022Aspirant
RAID 60 is configured.
- StephenBSep 20, 2022Guru - Experienced User
ravi926 wrote:
RAID 60 is configured.
So lots of RAID redundancy (you can lose up to two disks in every RAID-6 stripe with no data loss).
I don't recommend the cloning procedure you linked in earlier in your situation. The problem with cloning a failing disk is that any bad sectors on the original end up as good sectors on the clone (but with bad data). That can lead to volume corruption, since RAID cannot reconstruct the data.
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