Tom,I'd imagine that John is contempt with the risk - he is using Raid 0
(striping on the array) - so any kind of failure will cost him data. I'd imagine
is that the backup is his safety net.
Jon,Is your array simply going to powersafe mode?Can you try to diagnose it
little with the bag of tricks in this web page?https://wiki.archlinux.org/index
.php/hdparm
Hope it helps,Tomas
On Sun, Nov 10, 2019, 19:21 tom <tgrom.autom...@nuegia.net> wrote:
> On Sun, 10 Nov 2019 15:18:42 -0800
> 
> John Jason Jordan <joh...@gmx.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> > I have a 2-bay Mediasonic enclosure with two WD red drives in Raid 0,
> 
> > one 6TB, about 4 years old, and the other 8TB, about three years old.
> 
> > The enclosure has a USB3 jack and an eSata jack. I use the USB3 jack,
> 
> > but at one time I used the eSata connector and performance was the
> 
> > same. The drives are formatted ext4 and the Raid was created using the
> 
> > built-in Mediasonic software. The data is backed up nightly via rsync
> 
> > to a 16TB Synology NAS with two 8TB WD red drives, also in Raid 0.
> 
> > 
> 
> > I have had this setup for close to three years now, and it works great
> 
> > except when I try to read or write to the array and I have to sit and
> 
> > twiddle my thumbs for up to two full minutes waiting for the drive
> 
> > lights and the disk rumbling to stop. Once the drives are ready file
> 
> > transfers are reasonably fast - ~10-20 seconds to transfer a 2GB file.
> 
> > But then, even though I continue to do file transfers every couple of
> 
> > minutes, suddenly it will decide it needs to refresh itself, and then
> 
> > I have to stop everything until it finishes.
> 
> > 
> 
> > I've been putting up with this for long enough. Is there any way to
> 
> > get this array to stop constantly refreshing itself?
> 
> > 
> 
> > _______________________________________________
> 
> > PLUG mailing list
> 
> > PLUG@pdxlinux.org
> 
> > http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
> 
> 
> 
> Really would not recommend using hardware raid. There are a lot of
> 
> things you have to ask yourself, like what happens if the raid
> 
> controller dies. Most of the time you have to get the exact same make
> 
> and model to get your data back with hardware raids. Also, using ext4
> 
> filesystem for raid while works, is hardly an ideal situation in
> 
> today's age.
> 
> 
> 
> Sounds like there are a lot of implementation shortcomings with
> 
> MediaSonic's hardware raid not not properly prioritizing scrubbing.
> 
> 
> 
> Here is what I would recommend. If you can put your enclosure into JBOD
> 
> mode. This presents the disks in the enclosure to the OS directly
> 
> without any special mapping going on. From there Follow the
> 
> installation instructions for the OS of your choice for installing the
> 
> OpenZFS kernel modules. From there setup an OpenZFS zraid to your
> 
> liking and fill back up the NAS with your data. Ounce done you can put
> 
> zfs scrub into a monthly cronjob to keep the system maintained.
> 
> 
> 
> https://zfsonlinux.org/
> 
> 
> 
> http://www.open-zfs.org/wiki/Newcomers
> 
> 
> 
> Highly recommend using OpenZFS .8 or newer if you can. There were a lot
> 
> of great features brought about in this release.
> 
> _______________________________________________
> 
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> 
> PLUG@pdxlinux.org
> 
> http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
> 

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