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Forum Discussion
cleveland_rocks
Jul 03, 2020Aspirant
RN314 won't power up
This morning (3 July 2020), my Netgear RN314 did not power up as usual. It is a 4 disk system running OS 6 with the latest firmware. I tried changing the outlet for the external power supply brick, a...
- Jul 07, 2020
It's actually a separate RAID with a separate set of partitions, but I think that's what you meant. fdisk -l will show you all the partitions. If you have more than one drive size or have ever upgraded from smaller drives without an OS re-install, the main BTRFS volume will span more than one RAID "layer".
Sandshark
Jul 03, 2020Sensei - Experienced User
The ReadyNAS RAID is created by standard Linux MDADM and the volumes are standard BTRFS. So, they can be mounted on a standard Linux system that includes those packages. The 4GB OS partition, however, is not enough for a typical Linux installation, so you'll have to use something else for that.
cleveland_rocks
Jul 06, 2020Aspirant
Thanks for the reply. I'm relieved to hear that there is a pathway for migration of the existing RAID.
Do I understand you correctly that Netgear put a 4GB partition on the RAID to run their OS 6? My intention was to build a server running Xen on its own physical SSD and then have my 4 x 4TB hard disk RAID mounted on that system. I'll have to check whether Xen has the two packages you mentioned.
Thanks again.
- StephenBJul 06, 2020Guru - Experienced User
cleveland_rocks wrote:
Do I understand you correctly that Netgear put a 4GB partition on the RAID to run their OS 6?
Yes, and also a small swap partition. The OS partition is RAID-1 (mirrored on every disk). I've seen a couple of different RAID formats used for the swap.
cleveland_rocks wrote:
My intention was to build a server running Xen on its own physical SSD and then have my 4 x 4TB hard disk RAID mounted on that system.
You can of course do that, since you don't need to mount the OS partition.
- SandsharkJul 07, 2020Sensei - Experienced User
It's actually a separate RAID with a separate set of partitions, but I think that's what you meant. fdisk -l will show you all the partitions. If you have more than one drive size or have ever upgraded from smaller drives without an OS re-install, the main BTRFS volume will span more than one RAID "layer".
- cleveland_rocksJul 15, 2020Aspirant
All the drives are the original ones installed, and they are all 4TB. What concerns me is that the RAID is encrypted, but I do have the USB with the key in working order.
Does this present a problem if I wanted to mount the RAID in a new server? Is there a way of entering the key manually to unlock the data, or am I stuck with trying to source a used ReadyNAS?
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