I was looking at the post at http://forums.dlink.com/index.php?topic=6215.msg80857#msg80857 and noticed that someone remarked that using RAID 1 is probably not the best way to go. Considering I bought my hard drives at different times they still maybe in the same lot.
I was wondering if anyone has any inputs as to how well their RAID regeneration went after a failed HD? Was it as easy as taking the old hard drive out and putting the new one in and letting the OS handle the re-mirroring?? I know that an automated file (folder) re-sync program is a lot of managing - possibly...but I'm thinking why RAID when u can file sync?
TIA
Perhaps you need to understand what RAID1 does and then you'll understand why, under certain circumstances it "may not be the best way to go" and in others, it is the only way to go, and trust me on this - file sync can NOT do what RAID1 does.
First RAID1 is NOT a form of data backup - it's about disk redundancy.
Data backup is having multiple copies of your data, so that it is not lost in the event of a problem - such as accidental or deliberate deletion, corruption due to a virus or a power outage, and yes in the event of a disk failure. Disk redundancy is about minimizing or eliminating the downtime impact caused by a hard disk failure.
For the sake of discussion - let's say you are running a small consultancy business from your home, and you have a couple of PCs, one for you and one for your assistant and you're storing the data on your computer. You have a big project due tomorrow and at noon today the disk in your computer crashes - you have no backup - you've lost weeks of work, and because you're unable to deliver on time, you've lost the confidence of your client.
Let's look at the same scenario now - but this time, you're syncing your computer every night to a removable disk - when the disk in your computer crashes, you connect the removable disk to your assistant's computer, and copy the files across and continue to work - you lost all the work done before noon, so you have to do it over again - you call your client and explain the situation and he agrees to extend the deadline, but he's not happy.
In the third scenario, you have the data stored on a RAID1 array, and when the hard drive crashes, you continue to work uninterrupted, deliver the project on time and everyone's happy.
Understand the difference now?
As to the question on regeneration - I've never had a disk fail on my DNS-323, but I have simulated failures, by removing a disk, with the power on & off, and on every occasion it has rebuilt the array successfully. I've seen anecdotal evidence that where others have reported problems, but I have not experienced this personally.