Hi Anders.
>> Why three drives in a Raid1? Raid one is just mirror, or is the
>> third drive like a "hot" replace drive if one of the others fail?
> With normal mirroring (one original, one copy) you do have the
> redundancy and the speed boost at reads, but at mirroring with one
> original and two copies (I know AIX does this), you get in to a
> scenario that is quite handy. Say you run a large database in a
> 24/7 operation. You want to back the database up, but you can only
> get 5-10 minutes downtime on it. You then quiesce the database,
> split off the second copy from the mirror, mount that as a
> separate file system and back that up while the original with its
> first copy has already stepped back into full use.
>
> Once you finished your backup, you add your split-off copy back to
> the original and primary copy and you are back where you started.
Does this cause any problems, with the third disc now being out of
date compared to the first two?
Best wishes from Riley.
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