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Thread: A cautionary tale of data loss.

  1. #1

    Surprised/Amazed

    Like a lot of members on here I have a huge collection of TV and movies stored on a NAS drive at home.

    My current NAS setup was a 4 x 4Tb Synology unit. However when I set the device up, I grouped the drives as a JBOD (Just a Bunch of Disks) thinking if i ever lost a drive I'd loose a quarter of my content and I could re-acquire the files.

    Boy was I wrong, I had an out of the blue HDD failure 48 hours ago, and the entire 16Tb (of which about 14Tb was in use) has been lost due to a single disk failure. I tried every piece of software i could get my hands on, but alas, non of them would recover anything from the remaining three disks

    Even a simple quote from a data recovery company wants over £500/Tb to recover information.


    I am sure that I will not be able to replace 75% of the content that was on the NAS as it's been built up over the last 5-6 years, and a lot of the titles are no longer available. I never factored on having to try and find every single file in my collection again at some point.

    Needless to say, I've now re-built the NAS with 4 brand new drives, this time in RAID5, so I have a reduced capacity of 12Tb, but I don't think I'll ever get that much back anyway. I'll also be using a service like Amazon Glacier or BackBurner to archive the NAS to once a month should a more serious failure happen (fire or theft!)

    No doubt my ISP will be having kittens over the next few weeks as I try and rebuild my collection 24/7


    WK

  2. Lounge   -   #2
    Caballero's Avatar Hung Like A Horse
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    Jul 2010
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    I feel for you. I had something like this (though on a much smaller scale) happen to me a year or two ago.

    My set-up is similar to yours; a Synology box with a one-disk redundancy. Just make sure you use reputable drives made for the purpose and enable disk health monitoring and you should be okay.

  3. Lounge   -   #3
    I threw away 300 movies i pirated long time ago during a bad day , and i am still feeling bad about it

  4. Lounge   -   #4
    Ouch, that's painful to read. I think the ability to recover from a JBOD disk failure depends on the JBOD implementation. I think there are some where you would still be able to access the other disks.

    How are the disks formatted in your config?

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