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-51 points

If you have 20TB of data to store, a single drive is safer than splitting it across multiple drives. Few point of failure in total.

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39 points
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If you are storing your own data a single drive is asking to lose all your data.

3 2 1 for all your important data.

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RAID6, my person. RAID6.

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16 points

RAID is not a backup.

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7 points

RAID6 only works if the machine is working fine. If something happens that toasts the whole thing then you’re fucked unless you have a backup offsite.

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6 points
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-36 points

Reducing the number of drives you are running, reduces the risk of losing data. Do you disagree?

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13 points

Depends entirely on the config. RAID 0? Higher risk. RAID 1? Lower risk.

I run RAID 0 on a couple of external USB drives with a full backup on Google and locally. No worries.

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10 points

It seems you never had a HDD die on you.

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27 points

You are not ready to be lecturing on this topic.

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9 points

This single point of failure equals to putting all of your eggs in the same basket.

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-16 points

Which is why you have backups. Doesn’t matter if you have 1 32TB drive or 32 1TB drives, backups are how you recover from failure. Running 1 drive is less risk than running 2 drives for the same storage capacity.

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8 points

If it’s split up sure, but I’m talking about a raid > 0 setup and/or having backup copies of your data onto drive #2

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-15 points

Raid0? You mean having two devices stripped across is rather than just one device with no stripping? Raid0 is a risk you take when you care more about performance than downtime to restore a backup.

If I have 20TB of data, it cannot fit on a single 16TB drive. So my options are Raid, or this single drive option. I would always pick the single drive if I could afford it.

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9 points

Double check that symbol there.

Raid 5 is a great balance of capacity and useful storage with 3 drives. You get 1 drive worth of fault tolerance and 2 drives worth of capacity. I personally have mismatched drives so I run raid 1 in between the matching sizes, and jbod between the raid 1 mirrors (well the zfs equivilent) And my really important data is backed up onto two more drives in raid 10.

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3 points

First, if you have more than one disk, you should be either getting redundancy through mirroring, or building arrays of several disks with redundant methods like RAID5 / RAID6 / ZFS zraid2.

Second, no single copy of data is safe, you must always have recent, tested backups.

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