Quoting Jochen Kunz, who wrote on Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 10:14:24AM +0100 ..
On Thu, 21 Jan 2010 12:44:29 -0800
Larry McVoy <lm(a)bitmover.com> wrote:
Disks are much higher volume and are forced to be
reliable "enough".
That "enough" is the critical point. Check
the average read failure
rate of SATA drives. It is 1 per 10^14 bits for my ST3500320AS. The
recoverable read error rate I presume.
drive has a capacity of 512 bytes/sect x 976773168
sectors. I.e. I will
get at least one read error when I try to read the entire disk 25
times. If I build a RAID out of 5 of this drives I only need 5 reads
through the RAID to get a read error and the RAID will degrate.
If you
aren't backing up with a crc then you are doing it wrong.
With a CRC you can
detect bit rott. (Probably. Somthing like MD5 or
SHA-1 is mch better then a CRC.) But you can't repair the defect data.
So you want ECC...
I plan to stick ZFS on my storage.
Wilko
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