After converting our 300 DVDs, I couldn't be happier or sadder. It is so amazing to be able to watch any DVD we own through Media Center and on my Xbox Media Center in our kitchen. However, on my 2.5TB array, all these movies take 1.6TB and I obviously have a few hundred GB's of music, pictures, documents, profiles, podcasts, etc.
5 drives go to the active array and 5 go for my backup but I have an 11th which holds my most important data.
Yesterday, I got pretty sick with the flu and had a rough night (I should be sleeping now) but just now it occurred to me--what if I used all 10 drives? That would be 5TB! That would hold another 400 movies! I definitely need more space for other projects like when I start scanning in our 30,000 analog pictures & slides.
The problem is this. Since I have two arrays but want to combine them, I don't know if it's possible. In order to rebuild the active array, I would have to delete it--erasing all the data--just as I would have to do for the backup array. Therefore, the only way to create this 10 drive RAID0 array (which sounds scary--one drive failure!) would be to literally delete all my data except the data on that 11th drive. The 11th drive pretty much has everything except the video and podcasts--those of which could be backed up to another computer--but I don't happen to have an extra 1.6TB laying around to temporarily store the data until the new array is created.
How would a big business handle a situation like this? I know they would never sacrifice a backup and I doubt I would ever pursue this but it just occurred to me how horrible the situation is. I wonder if there is a way in Windows to tell it to add 5 drives to the array and then give it about a week to rearrange all the bits--that sounds very risky. 10 drives sounds just as risky.
Then I thought maybe 10 in RAID5. Again I wasn't a huge fan of RAID5 software-wise. It slows everything down and if I'm not extra careful when I unhook the array (which I probably would never have to do--but just restarting) it can prompt a regenerate which takes 24 hours for 5 drives. I always feel like the filesystem or files got messed up when it prompts a regenerate so when that has happened, I usually just deleted the active array and restored from my backup array--that's around 3 solid days of copying--and 3 solid days of having all the drives inside the house and not offsite.
Getting sick is no fun. I do not recommend hunting down sick people to catch their sickness. I hope my RAID0 array's don't catch my flu or whatever I have.