I want to implement some form of redundancy on my home file server, as I have none currently. My current configuration is as follows:<BR><BR>Pirmary Master: 120 GB HDD<BR>Primary Slave: 80 GB ...
I'm trying to decide how best to use a pair of 4TB external USB3 disks in my file server. At this point I've pulled one of the disks from it's enclosure and installed it in the file server. Now I'm ...
In my last blog entry, I talked about VLDBs. One of the tactics suggested was to use as many data files on as many drives as possible to give better I/O performance. This makes sense, but the usual ...
XDA Developers on MSN
This backup strategy keeps my files safe even if my NAS dies
But what if the NAS goes offline? Heck, even if the storage drives and the underlying OS can be restored using some tech ...
XDA Developers on MSN
RAID 5 used to be great, but modern, large HDDs broke it
If you were to gauge RAID 5’s utility just by looking at a RAID calculator, it would seem like an efficient option for most ...
RAID 5 explained: RAID 5 sees the distribution of parity information between all drives in the RAID set and is resilient against the failure of a single disk. So, how does RAID 5 share data in a 10 MB ...
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