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Last posts - Page 1078

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fitfan
Joined in Aug 2018
162 post(s)

Thank God It's Friday

Everything about iStripper
April 12, 2019, 52 answers
Another great contribution by @wyldanimal with excellent recommendations on hardware and backup practices most users ignore.
Can’t tell you how many times I’ve had to try to recover important data from a failed or damaged HDD with data recovery tools. This can be a very expensive and time intensive process. And depending on what failed, almost impossible in some cases or cost prohibitive.
I also have two NAS appliances, one is a retail (QNAP) solution similar to the one shown above. The other is a FreeNAS solution that allows me to use different size and brands of drives to expand my storage solution. It’s allowed me to configure dedicated parity drives and utilize an older smaller 256GB SSD as a dedicated cache drive. Very cool NAS platform for the more technically inclined.

Most branded solution like the one listed above require that you purchase 4 of the exact same drive. And you should purchase at least one extra to have on hand for drive failure replacement. Rebuilding from parity from a large array can take quite a number of hours. With 3 or 4 drives in a raid 5 array you can lose one drive to failure without data loss thanks to drive parity. That is where the back USB drive comes in.
You should backup the NAS in the event of a catastrophic failure to either a local USB or cloud storage based on your comfort with the security of those solutions. And as mentioned have two external drives to rotate.