<div dir="ltr"><div><div><div><div><div>Hmmm. I thought I had sent this, but just discovered it was still a draft. Sorry for the time warp.<br><br></div></div></div></div></div><div class="gmail_extra"><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Wed, Mar 22, 2017 at 4:43 PM, Karl Auer <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:kauer@biplane.com.au" target="_blank">kauer@biplane.com.au</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex"><span class="gmail-">On Wed, 2017-03-22 at 16:12 -0700, Bruce Ferrell wrote:<br>
> Bottom line, one size never fits all... poke, prod (gently) and use <br>
> trouble shooting steps to make a determination of what's needed to <br>
> recover and NEVER blindly follow "just do this..." instructions<br>
<br>
</span>Sometimes people have no choice.<br>
<br>
Not sure what you are on about.<br>
<br>
The OP gave quite a good sitrep, made it clear that he was not in<br>
danger of losing critical data, and was given good, clear and above all<br>
harmless advice: Take a copy of the RAID, recover data from the copy.<br>
<br>
Had the OP said that this was critical data I would have offered quite<br>
different advice: Turn the thing off and take it to a professional data<br>
recovery service.<br>
<span class="gmail-im gmail-HOEnZb"><br>
Regards, K.<br>
<br><br></span></blockquote></div><br>The OP checks in (Wednesday is my busiest day).<br><br>First
off, this is raid-0, and comprises three 4-TB drives. It's just
stripes so I have a larger partition than any one of my drives. No
redundancy. Sounds horrible, but remember this is hobby data only. Not
only that, but there are enough backups of critical bits for me to feel
okay about re-creating anything lost. And I have physical limitations
in my machines that keep me from adding more drives, which I might
otherwise do to have some redundancy.<br><br>Thing is, I want some
specifics about what little bits were lost. Just filenames will do.
This is mostly lots and lots of little bitty files. The few big ones
are the ones I back up a lot.<br><br>I may already have enough, or
nearly so. I have copied all the files I could in the root directory
of the raid, and captured names of the ones I could not read. Of course
there are some directories I could not read. and anything in them is
lost too. But there are some directories that are readable. So I'd
like to do the same thing in those. There are enough of them that I'd
like to automate it, including taking note of what was unreadable.
Filenames themselves will tell me a lot.<br><br><div>I'm not going
to image the broken RAID, because I'm just not going to spend the time
dealing with tiny fragments. I'm going to recover what complete files I
can, though I'm not sure any data files will be useful, because some
scripts may be recovered and it's my hobby and I'll feel better about it
if I go that far. I have a working tar file of the main sqlite
database as of 3 days ago and the only other stuff that really matters
is the little scripts I use to automate some of the chores. I don't
want fragments that I'm not sure were current -- I'd rather rewrite from
memory or from scratch. Then I have a day or so of work to redo, and I
have a log book that tells me what that was. I should do what recovery
I can, use the new disks to replace that raid entirely, and order a new
set. When I'm back up and running I'll test the bejabbers out of the
raid's drives before I put any back in service.<br></div><div><br></div>And
background: I've lost data before, like my PhD research back around
1999. Eeek!. So twice I've gone to data recovery services and paid a
few thousand bucks to get data back. Because of this, nowadays I stay
pretty current with backups of crucial stuff. But my raid is so big I
just have to take my chances. I didn't have a great destination for
storing backups. This is changing, and I now have another big machine,
on which I'm installing a RAID that will mirror the things on this one.
But I'm going to use the drives I got for that as the replacement RAID
in the old machine. <br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature"><div dir="ltr"><div>Kevin O'Gorman<br></div>#define QUESTION ((bb) || (!bb)) /* Shakespeare */<br><br><div><span style="line-height:normal;font-variant:normal;font-size:10pt;font-style:normal;font-weight:normal"><span style="line-height:normal;font-variant:normal;font-size:10pt;font-style:normal;font-weight:normal"></span></span><table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="448" border="0"><tbody><tr><td width="25"><img src="cid:XVHDKDFDBURW.IMAGE_60.gif" width="25" height="21"></td>
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