"snapshot" RAID
Tom Metro
tmetro-blu-5a1Jt6qxUNc at public.gmane.org
Sat Mar 27 21:43:28 EDT 2010
Dan Ritter wrote:
> ...I decided to experiment with *not* putting a RAID mirror on this
> machine. There is a second disk installed, but I keep it spun down
> with hdparm. Once a day an rsnapshot is taken and stored on sdb2.
This seems like a good solution for a portable machine where battery
life matters.
I originally purchased a second identical drive for my primary laptop
with plans to run RAID1, but due to battery, noise, and heat
considerations, I decided against it.
The snapshot approach gets you enough redundancy, such that you can
rescue the system, even when you're on the road and away from your
backup storage, while not costing you power and noise constantly.
How about sharing the code you use to implement your backups?
I wouldn't expect rsnapshot to be used in this scenario. I gather your
intention isn't to create an identical mirror on the second disk, but an
archive of snapshots.
"Back In Time" - a GUI wrapper for rsync - could probably be substituted
for rsnapshot. It has the ability to call out to a script at various
points, so you could have it run the necessary hdparm commands
before/after backup.
Though if the drives are identical in size, I think I'd be more likely
to make snapshots to the primary drive, and periodically mirror the
entire thing to the second drive.
> (sdb1 is a copy of the boot partition, tested and then never mounted.)
But that needs to be re-mirrored after each kernel update, no?
How often do you test it, and what are the steps you use to force the
boot from the second drive? A BIOS setting? A mere GRUB menu option
won't necessarily provide a true test, as that will still load GRUB from
the primary drive's MBR.
-Tom
--
Tom Metro
Venture Logic, Newton, MA, USA
"Enterprise solutions through open source."
Professional Profile: http://tmetro.venturelogic.com/
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