On 12/13/23 13:50, Dan Ritter wrote:
Pocket wrote:Many reasons........ If the RAID controller bites the bullet you are usually toast unless you have another RAID controller (same manufacturer and type) as a spare.mdadm, zfs and btrfs all lack this problem.
Not for me as I am not going down that worm hole
I have zero luck replacing one companies raid controller with another and ditto on raid built into the motherboard.As above.
As above
I really don't need any help losing my data/files as I do a good job of that all by myself ;)btrfs and zfs have snapshots which really help avoiding losing data. On other machines, rsnapshot is often suitable.
I am exploring rdiff-backup
I found it is better to just have my data on several backup disks, that way if one fails I get another disk and copy all the data to the newly purchased disk.RAID isn't a backup solution, it's a way of keeping things going until you have time to restore. (And also a way of improving performance and/or manageability.) If you don't need or want it, you shouldn't use it. Same as any tool.
I don't need the expense or trouble. Raspberry pi(s) and USB drives equate to "just works" -- It's not easy to be me