Who's moaning?
It sounds a bit like you are....
Nice, Ubuntu just wiped out my RAID array...
Who's moaning?
Nice, Ubuntu just wiped out my RAID array...
Different hardware = different issues.
Who's moaning?
Doesn't matter wether it's RAID 0, 1, 5 or JBOD, backups are essential period.
Agreed to a certain extent but the principal is the same.
Did you read any documentation as to how ubuntu would behave when you tried to install it on your particular hardware? Does ubuntu fully support your hardware? Have the vendor indicated it should be ok or supplied drivers for your hardware?
You are! You haven't asked for help you just made a statement on your bad experience.
RAID 1 is a back up
No, it's redundancy, a backup is a very different thing, maybe you need to do some reading too?
Redundancy - having a back up in case the primary fails.
literally, back up is having a plan in place in case things don't go as expected.
Your're reading too much into it.
Redundancy - having a back up in case the primary fails.
Try just re-adding the two disks to the RAID array, without attempting to re-format or anything else, looks to me like the array & its data should still be there![]()
I'd also avoid the JMicron controller like the plauge, its not a proper hardware solution, and there are plenty of forum posts about odd issues with it when trying to install. You might also try reading Bugzilla, massive post on issues with its drivers here https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux-source-2.6.17/+bug/57502
For that matter, I don't know why you chose to use it for your RAID array as opposed to the Intel ports (I wouldn't- The Intel drivers are more mature and much better supported both under Linux & Windows), but more importantly I'd try with the CD drive on one of the Intel ports, as I suspect that this is probably somewhere at the root of your issue
Cheers
-Leezer-
That is NOT a hardware RAID array, its a FAKERAID controller, requiring drivers to be installed in Windows for it to work.
YES the Ubuntu installer shouldn't have touched your partitions until you committed to the changes, but it seeing two individual disks has nothing to do with it. No matter what, none of those fakeraid controllers show up under Linux as one drive because all they do is present a drive controller with a funky bios to the driver in Windows - Linux just sees that as a plain old HDD controller.
Does not change the fact that it did and continues to change something.
no, RAID 1 arent true "backup" what if controller died, then u got no backup
true backup method would be OFF site backup like usb external hard drive or NAS device![]()
yes i've had RAID 1 failed on me completely twice, lost all data so i dumped raid 1 as i realised it was wrong way for true backup![]()
Well i can unplug any of my drives from my RAID controller and stick it in the onboard controller and it works fine. Admittedly i have to reset the drive for that controller if i want RAID1 again but i still have access to all the data. Dunno what you did wrong but it wasnt the RAID's fault.
I have a hardware raid card with 2 RAID1 arrays hanging off it. If that card dies, I lose everything, unless I can get exactly the same (not cheap) card to plug everything into. I can't just "stick it in the onboard controller" and have it all work ok.
As has been said before, RAID 1 is not a backup.