Hi, currently I have a almost none backups and I want to change them. I have a PC with Nextcloud on 500gb ssd that I also use for gaming (1tb system drive). Nextcloud would be used to store/sync images, documents, contacts, and calendar from my phone and laptop. I also have an old pc that has 2x 80gb, 120gb, 320gb, and 500gb hdd. I want to use it for other backups like OS snapshots, programming projects, etc. but its not a big hdd but a lot of small hdds. Should I store each backup on 2 drives? Can I automate this? Any suggestions would be helpful.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 year ago

    How old are these disks? If wouldn’t trust anything of value to an HDD (better to save them on a bunch of good quality DVDs or BluRay disks than relying on such old disks.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        If I’ve learned something about selfhosting and backups it is that you can trust HDDs to spin for 3-5 years and should still do backups. I myself do backups to HDDs that are only powered on for these backups. I’m still not sure if thats enougth.

        Raid is more for an always-on solution, but not great for safe backups. They still might get damaged at the same time, because you bought them at the same time, from the same vendor and they have the same usage time.

        • @TCB13
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          11 year ago

          Raid is more for an always-on solution, but not great for safe backups. They still might get damaged at the same time

          Yes.

          I believe it really depends on the amount of data you write to the disks. From my experience: if you’ve two disks, same model, same brand, same powered on hours they might fail at the same time and you end up with nothing thus for most people it might not even be worth to RAID at all on a home NAS. Have a main disk for always online to write / read from and a second disk that is turned on once a day to rsync all data is. Most likely safer and more reliable, you also get extra protection against accidental deletes.

          • rentar42
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            11 year ago

            These kinds of issues are what drove me to use RaidZ2 (I went over board with using 6-disks): When during resilvering after a broken disk a second disk fails, it’ll still keep the data.

      • rentar42
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        11 year ago

        One thing that RAID doesn’t do is verify the integrity of your data on read. In other words: if you have silent data corruption somewhere you won’t notice.

        For many use cases that’s acceptable, since it doesn’t handle often, but personally I don’t like it for any kind or achival/backups. That’s why I picked ZFS, which stores and verifies checksums even on non-mirrored/non-raid storage. I’ve added RaidZ2 (similar to RAID 5 with 2 parity disks) on top of it to be able to recover from checksum errors.