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NAS
#217691 08/09/08 12:53 PM
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If anyone is considering having a Network Attached Storage device, like I have in the D-Link DNS-323..here's a warning.. make sure you have a backup of all of your data some place else.

I had 2 X 500GB Seagate drives in a JBOD array, the Dlink crapped out.. my drives are fine.. but I have NO WAY of accessing the data on my own. Got a new DNS-323 thinking I'll just plug in my drives and voila.. not a chance.. they have to be reformatted..

So, my only recourse, is to have a data recovery company rebuild the jbod array and get my stuff off the drives..

The cost for that ? minimum $1,000.00 dollars.. Ya.. I'm not impressed right now..

The data ? 400GB of music, but more important, every single digital picture I took in the last 4 years..plus the very first 2 mini-dv tapes of my daughter when she was 3 years old.. That, I have to have back..

Just thought I would share that unfortunate experience here in the hopes it can be avoided in the future.

Riker


Acoustic Zen Adagio, Veritas center, Axiom EP500, QS8s, Anthem AVM20, MC20,Adcom GFA7400
Re: NAS
Riker #217692 08/09/08 01:02 PM
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Sorry to hear about your unfortunate situation. \:\(

Yes, backup is critical to the longevity of your data. Don't leave your data in one place, even if that one place is a set of redundant drives (e.g. RAID1). I got bitten by a hard drive crash about 4 years ago and lost many family pictures. I've since learned.

Re: NAS
pmbuko #217694 08/09/08 02:47 PM
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 Originally Posted By: pmbuko

Don't leave your data in one place


Including one physical location if the data is very important to you. I've seen many small fires (trashcans etc…) that did little damage to the room but destroyed computers and melted the plastic media stored in the room.


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Re: NAS
Riker #217695 08/09/08 03:07 PM
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You have my sympathies. I work in IT and so I know the importance of redundant (or double redundant) backups. I'm the DBA for my company and so I'm extremely picky when it comes to backup plans. Something like this demonstrates why companies spend tons of money on serious backup systems. Data is priceless.

My Photo + Music collection totals about 80GB. It all 'lives' on my notebook, but I keep two backup copies on two different external USB drives (one at home, one at work), and a third backup on an old Linux PC at home, just in case.

I don't know much about the DNS-323.... ok, reading about it...

D-Link's site says it's a RAID 1 array, which means your drives were just mirrored. Is that how you set up the RAID array? If so, that might be good, because there's no striping issues to deal with. If you were using a RAID 1 array, each of those 500gb drives should be an exact mirror of each other. If you know the drives are ok and it's just the controller that crapped out, your data might still be ok. Other RAID types stripe the data across multiple drives, and recovery is a bit more difficult with them. It depends on how the RAID 1 controller works (and I have no idea with the 323), but your data might be completely intact and easily accessible. Maybe.

Disclaimer: Ok, from here on out things could get dangerous. I'm *not* an expert on RAID arrays, but I know just enough to be dangerous. I can't promise that any of my advice will help, or maybe even further destroy your data. Take my advice with extreme caution....

Do you have a PC with a SATA controller? If so, remove one of the 500GB drives from the 323 and put it in your PC as a secondary drive. Boot with the PC's normal boot drive, of course, but that other drive should then be recognized by OS. You might get lucky and all of your files will be right there, and you could then just copy them somewhere else safe. I would think that this would be pretty safe to do, as either the data will be there or it won't. If that drive works, then the rest of your files ought to be on the second drive.

You could also try buying a second 323 and putting these drives in it and seeing if it would be able to read the data. Again, since we're not dealing with striping, it might just work. Of course, the danger here is that it would do some sort of auto-initialization and wipe out the data.

A third option would be to scour the net for details about how the 323 works. I'd bet that the 323 is a simple little Linux box. It's possible that you could find a group of tinkerers out there in another forum somewhere that could tell you how to re-build the array from an actual linux box and get your data back. That just depends on how much hardware you have lying around at home, and how confident you are in your abilities.

EDIT: Nevermind, I didnt' pay close enough attention to your post and now see that you were using them in a JBOD array.That changes things, since your data wasn't mirrored. There may still be ways to recover the data.

Seriously, Good Luck.


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Re: NAS
PeterChenoweth #217696 08/09/08 03:20 PM
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Doing a google serach for 'rebuilding JBOD array' returns some results...

http://forums.nvidia.com/lofiversion/index.php?t16706.html

http://forums.overclockers.com.au/showthread.php?t=496849

That second one points to software called GetDataBack:
http://www.download.com/GetDataBack-Data-Recovery/3000-2094_4-10061631.html

Might help...


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Re: NAS
PeterChenoweth #217811 08/11/08 07:15 PM
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Thanks Peter.. appreciate your post. I am in IT as well, but it never occured to me that I would not be able to just plug them in another exact same device and see all my files. I actually did get a second dns-323 unit, but it would not recognize the drives until I formatted them..which I did not do of course.

I feel that my only safe alternative is to bring the drives in and have them recovered by a company that specializes in that line of work. I am very confident that I can get my data back.. but it's going to be hard to swallow the price tag of a grand.

Now I will have 2 dns devices and they will both have the same data.. and I am going to get an BD burner and burn it there as well..triple play.

Lesson is most definitively learned.


Acoustic Zen Adagio, Veritas center, Axiom EP500, QS8s, Anthem AVM20, MC20,Adcom GFA7400
Re: NAS
Riker #217832 08/12/08 03:21 AM
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I've been worrying about losing my data lately. Right now I keep everything important on just one external hard drive. I think I need to at least make it RAID, and regularly backing up to DVD would be wise, I suppose. I still don't know exactly how I want to approach it.

Re: NAS
CV #217874 08/12/08 04:57 PM
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Unless you have specialized needs like making constant changes to your data, the most effective way to backup is to an external hard drive.

From what I understand, raid becomes usefull in critical applications where you write lots of new data on an ongoing basis and/or need high availability of data. Something like a hospital where a disc crash could result in lost x-rays or scans, or a database application where you need to verify data as something moves through multiple processes.

What type, and how often you backup depends on how much your data changes. If it's music you rip once, you really don't need to back it up every week.

At work we do daily incremental bacups (stuff thats new each day) and weekly full backups (everything on a drive).

I havn't set myself any formal backup schedule for full backups, but once every 6 months might be a good start.


Fred

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Re: NAS
fredk #217876 08/12/08 05:21 PM
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I've been experimenting with freeware backup programs to backup my data to an external hard drive in a scheduled nightly run. So far, I have not found a perfect solution.

Anybody have good ideas on an inexpensive software solution for this on XP? Ideally, I'd like to maintain a parallel image of my various data directories. I prefer not to deal with incremental backups where I have to figure out which historical backup date contains the file I need.

Hmmm, sounds like I am describing RAID 1. Maybe I should just do that again but external storage would be nice should my entire PC take a beating.


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Re: NAS
Murph #217877 08/12/08 05:23 PM
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RAID is not a backup. RAID is redundancy, but if the data goes bad, it instantly goes bad on both disks.


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