Richard Scobie wrote:
Bill Davidsen wrote:
It should work, but I don't like it... it leaves you with a lot of
exposure between backups.
Unless your data change a lot, you might consider a good incremental
dump program to DVD or similar.
Thanks. I have abandoned this option for various
Bill Davidsen wrote:
It should work, but I don't like it... it leaves you with a lot of
exposure between backups.
Unless your data change a lot, you might consider a good incremental
dump program to DVD or similar.
Thanks. I have abandoned this option for various reasons, including
peopl
Richard Scobie wrote:
Has anyone had any experience or comment regarding linux RAID over
ieee1394?
As a budget backup solution, I am considering using a pair of 500GB
drives, each connected to a firewire 400 port, configured as a linear
array, to which the contents of an onboard array will b
2006/8/23, Richard Scobie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Has anyone had any experience or comment regarding linux RAID over ieee1394?
I've been successfully running a 4x250Gb Raid5 over ieee1394 with XFS on top.
The 4 drives are sharing the same ieee1394 bus, so the bandwidth is
awfull, because they have
On Thu, 24 Aug 2006, Richard Scobie wrote:
> Gordon Henderson wrote:
>
> > While I haven't done this, I have a client who uses Firewire drives
> > (Lacie) as a backup solution and they seem to "just work", and look like
> > locally attached SCSI drives (Performance is quite good too!) I guess you
Mike Hardy wrote:
I'm not sure SMART works over firewire anyway. That's a question.
http://smartmontools.sourceforge.net/:
"As for USB and FireWire (ieee1394) disks and tape drives, the news is
not good. They appear to Linux as SCSI devices but their implementations
do not usually support tho
Richard Scobie wrote:
> Dexter Filmore wrote:
>
>> Of all modes I wouldn't use a linear setup for backups. One disk dies
>> - all data is lost.
>
>> I'd go for an external raid5 solution, tho those tend to be slow and
>> expensive.
>>
>
> Unfortunately "budget" is the overriding factor here. Un
Dexter Filmore wrote:
Of all modes I wouldn't use a linear setup for backups. One disk dies - all
data is lost.
I'd go for an external raid5 solution, tho those tend to be slow and
expensive.
Unfortunately "budget" is the overriding factor here. Unlike RAID 0, I
thought there may be a way
Gordon Henderson wrote:
While I haven't done this, I have a client who uses Firewire drives
(Lacie) as a backup solution and they seem to "just work", and look like
locally attached SCSI drives (Performance is quite good too!) I guess you
won't be hot pluging/unplugging them, so those issues won
2006/8/23, Richard Scobie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
As a budget backup solution, I am considering using a pair of 500GB
drives, each connected to a firewire 400 port, configured as a linear
array, to which the contents of an onboard array will be rsynced weekly.
You can get 1TB+ RAID0 FW800 "drives"
On Wed, Aug 23, 2006 at 11:35:26AM +1200, Richard Scobie wrote:
} Has anyone had any experience or comment regarding linux RAID over ieee1394?
}
} As a budget backup solution, I am considering using a pair of 500GB
} drives, each connected to a firewire 400 port, configured as a linear
} array,
Has anyone had any experience or comment regarding linux RAID over ieee1394?
As a budget backup solution, I am considering using a pair of 500GB
drives, each connected to a firewire 400 port, configured as a linear
array, to which the contents of an onboard array will be rsynced weekly.
In th
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