December 3, 20187 yr I just moved all my data around to convert to xfs using the instructions posted in the forum. I used UnBalance to move the data from one full drive to another empty one until they were all converted over. The question I have is some drives have more than others. Is there a way the evenly transfer the data equally across each drive? I looked around UnBalance but it only scatters the data. Is there another tool to equally transfer the data over all the drives?
December 3, 20187 yr Author Well I though since it does that anyway or would it be best to fill up from drive 1 on until drive 6? My fear is I lost drive one and it does not rebuild right so I lose more. if spread out I don't lose as much if one fails. This is where I am unsure of the right way to do the drives.
December 4, 20187 yr I have the same theory. Whenever I increase the capacity of an array drive, I just use Krusader and move so-many gigs from disk1 to diskX, disk2 to diskX until they are the same rough size.
December 4, 20187 yr Author 1 hour ago, Squid said: I have the same theory. Whenever I increase the capacity of an array drive, I just use Krusader and move so-many gigs from disk1 to diskX, disk2 to diskX until they are the same rough size. Thanks Squid that was what I was looking for. I using UnBalance but just installed Krusader today. Any tips on moving it all around without losing anything or corrupting any data?
December 4, 20187 yr ONLY USE /media/DISKx for source and destination. DO NOT USE /media/user. If you mix user shares and disk shares during a move / copy, you will corrupt data
December 4, 20187 yr Author 1 hour ago, Squid said: ONLY USE /media/DISKx for source and destination. DO NOT USE /media/user. If you mix user shares and disk shares during a move / copy, you will corrupt data If that is the case where is the best location to keep Appdata then? I noticed it was spread across all DISKx drives but it shows it was slated for mnt/user.
December 4, 20187 yr Author 1 minute ago, kizer said: I personally just use MC (MidnightCommander) to move some stuff around. I checked that one out too at first but seemed clunky.
December 4, 20187 yr Just now, gsd2012 said: I checked that one out too at first but seemed clunky. True, but its helped me many times when I had an issue or couldn't do something because its more or less baked into the OS. Krusader should do the job thou.
December 4, 20187 yr MC doesn't have the most modern looking of interfaces but who cares when it's easy to use, powerful and gets the job done reliably?
December 4, 20187 yr 15 minutes ago, gsd2012 said: If that is the case where is the best location to keep Appdata then? I noticed it was spread across all DISKx drives but it shows it was slated for mnt/user. That is exactly what user shares are. Every folder in the root of the actual disk is a user share, and they are all merged into a single view in the user share mode. Normally you would set appdata to cache prefer, and the bulk if not all of appdata would live on your SSD cache pool.
December 4, 20187 yr Author @Jonathanm Ok I 100% agree on that just trying to move it all to Cache since I am adding new SSDs to create a cache pool, however being new I ended up putting the appdata on mnt/user (oops). I am just trying to make sure everything is in their right places. So Media is User Shares and all the background system stuff on cache like dockers, etc.
December 4, 20187 yr 7 minutes ago, gsd2012 said: @Jonathanm Ok I 100% agree on that just trying to move it all to Cache since I am adding new SSDs to create a cache pool, however being new I ended up putting the appdata on mnt/user (oops). I am just trying to make sure everything is in their right places. So Media is User Shares and all the background system stuff on cache like dockers, etc. You misunderstand. cache IS a disk. In the case of multiple drives in a cache pool, it's still presented as a single cache disk. /mnt/user/appdata IS the same as /mnt/cache/appdata, as well as /mnt/disk1/appdata. ALL the array disks plus the cache pool are part of /mnt/user.
December 4, 20187 yr Author 12 minutes ago, jonathanm said: That is exactly what user shares are. Every folder in the root of the actual disk is a user share, and they are all merged into a single view in the user share mode. Normally you would set appdata to cache prefer, and the bulk if not all of appdata would live on your SSD cache pool. So best place to put appdate is mnt/cache or still keep it on mnt/user? I have it set for cache prefer now. Now don't have the cache pool yet just single cache drive that is coming very soon. I just want to make sure I don't move it if it is in right place.
December 4, 20187 yr Author 2 minutes ago, jonathanm said: You misunderstand. cache IS a disk. In the case of multiple drives in a cache pool, it's still presented as a single cache disk. /mnt/user/appdata IS the same as /mnt/cache/appdata, as well as /mnt/disk1/appdata. ALL the array disks plus the cache pool are part of /mnt/user. Ah got it
December 4, 20187 yr 3 minutes ago, gsd2012 said: I have it set for cache prefer now. Now don't have the cache pool yet just single cache drive that is coming very soon. I just want to make sure I don't move it if it is in right place. That's perfect. When you get the cache drive set up, temporarily disable the docker and vm services (not just stop the dockers) so there is no longer a menu item for vm or docker in the gui. Then, run the mover. It will take all the appdata folders currently scattered across the data disks and move them to the cache drive. After that is complete, you can re-enable the services and start your dockers. They will be none the wiser that they are now on a different physical disk, because the /mnt/user/appdata path is still valid.
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