Originally posted by: 21stHermit
Nick,
I read and reread your excellent RAID 5 discussion. Please a few questions:
1) Does the large RAID "drive" have effectively a single drive letter? That's my biggest HD problem, moving large (say 50GB groups) file blocks to different drives.
2) Does the software "help" you move from the old non-RAID to the RAID-5?
3) Do you need to start with newly formated HDs?
4) How do you know a drive has failed? Does the software tell you?
Your newest post reminded me that I meant to go back and answer these.
1) Yes! One of the many nice things is that it can show up as a single drive (or be partitioned just like a normal large drive could be)
2) I'm not really sure what you mean, but I think I touch on this in the next question.
3) No, you don't, but depending on what card you use / what sort of intelligent software it has, you may or may not (probably will) lose the data initially stored on the drive. It all depends on the formatting software. Try looking through docs on the manufacturer's website or even emailing them to ask.
4) Typically yes, the software will tell you. Some controller cards have LED's that light up when there's an error. The software can often be setup to do things like email you, emit a loud annoying noise through the PC speaker, or have an onscreen popup error message when a drive fails. Again, it depends on the software, but there is some sort of monitoring. You don't just have to become attuned to the sound of a properly working array and sense when something is out of place
Sounds like you're in the boat I am -- just wanting a bit more data security on your desktop computer. FYI, I just bought the Promise sx4000 (4 port IDE) on eBay for $80 and a 256MB ECC DIMM for cache for $20ish. Just looking for my drives, now
I don't remember if I mentioned this earlier -- the cards I was looking at for hardware RAID5 in a desktop/workstation were the adaptec 2400a and the promise sx4000 / sx4060 / sx6000.
Nick