"snapshot" RAID
Dan Ritter
dsr-mzpnVDyJpH4k7aNtvndDlA at public.gmane.org
Sun Mar 28 14:27:13 EDT 2010
On Sat, Mar 27, 2010 at 09:43:28PM -0400, Tom Metro wrote:
> 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.
It's not a portable; it's a desktop that is used on weekends,
mornings, evenings, and days when I telecommute.
> How about sharing the code you use to implement your backups?
I didn't write any code for this -- well, mostly. The rsnapshot
cron job calls ~dsr/bin/rsnapshot.wrapper, which runs rsnapshot
and then immediately runs hdparm to spin down the disk again.
>
> 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.
Yes. It's a hedge against fumble-fingers more than anything
else.
> 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.
You could do that, but you would be solving a different problem.
> > (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?
No. I just need it to be able to boot enough to access the disk
and network. At that point I can figure out why I couldn't boot
from the first disk, replace it and reinstall the OS, if needed.
> 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.
I installed GRUB on the second disk, then told the system BIOS
to boot from that drive instead of the first. I tested it a few
times when I installed the system, once about six months later,
and not at all since then.
Every so often I look around at the snapshots to make sure they
look good. They do, more reliably than the rsnapshot system on
another machine where storage is on an external USB disk.
-dsr-
--
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You can't defend freedom by getting rid of it.
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