Lien1454 Posted February 23, 2019 Share Posted February 23, 2019 Hi, If I choose shut down and forget to stop the array first. Will this cause problems on a protected array? Or does unraid stop the array before it proceeds to shut down? Thanks Quote Link to comment
JorgeB Posted February 23, 2019 Share Posted February 23, 2019 1 hour ago, Lien1454 said: unraid stop the array before it proceeds to shut down ^this 1 Quote Link to comment
Lien1454 Posted February 23, 2019 Author Share Posted February 23, 2019 I've got a 4tb drive for parity. I can use another drive. Is the 2nd parity drive just a mirror of the other or is it better data loss prevention? Quote Link to comment
JorgeB Posted February 23, 2019 Share Posted February 23, 2019 Dual parity allows two failed drives, more info here: https://wiki.unraid.net/Parity#Dual_parity Quote Link to comment
Lien1454 Posted February 23, 2019 Author Share Posted February 23, 2019 Ahh thanks. 😀 There is no way to protect cache ssd drive? Quote Link to comment
JorgeB Posted February 23, 2019 Share Posted February 23, 2019 You can have a redundant cache pool Quote Link to comment
Lien1454 Posted February 23, 2019 Author Share Posted February 23, 2019 35 minutes ago, johnnie.black said: You can have a redundant cache pool Ok so If I add another ssd I will get this option ? Thanks Quote Link to comment
JorgeB Posted February 23, 2019 Share Posted February 23, 2019 Yes, as long as it's using btrfs as the filesystem, default is raid1 but it can be changed: https://forums.unraid.net/topic/46802-faq-for-unraid-v6/?do=findComment&comment=480421 Quote Link to comment
JonathanM Posted February 23, 2019 Share Posted February 23, 2019 13 hours ago, Lien1454 said: Hi, If I choose shut down and forget to stop the array first. Will this cause problems on a protected array? Or does unraid stop the array before it proceeds to shut down? Thanks If everything is operating as it should, shut down is fine. However, if you have an open file or terminal logged in to an array disk, or some other service is misbehaving, then stopping the array will hang waiting for the offending process to allow the disks to be gracefully unmounted. Shut down will time out and forcefully disconnect any running processes after a waiting period. This is good if you need the array to shut down now, it's bad if you forgot about an open file or something. I prefer to stop the array first, so I can verify everything closed properly before I shut down. If you don't have the luxury to wait, just use shutdown to be sure it will complete. Quote Link to comment
smileybri Posted February 18, 2023 Share Posted February 18, 2023 On 2/23/2019 at 3:27 PM, JonathanM said: If everything is operating as it should, shut down is fine. However, if you have an open file or terminal logged in to an array disk, or some other service is misbehaving, then stopping the array will hang waiting for the offending process to allow the disks to be gracefully unmounted. Shut down will time out and forcefully disconnect any running processes after a waiting period. This is good if you need the array to shut down now, it's bad if you forgot about an open file or something. I prefer to stop the array first, so I can verify everything closed properly before I shut down. If you don't have the luxury to wait, just use shutdown to be sure it will complete. I just spent some time in the manual and docs looking for answer to this same question. I even searched the forum here and then went out to a Google search to get directed to this post. This is not a complaint, but I did notice that the general documentation is missing this important instruction. I feel like this exact answer to the question could be placed in the documentation even if in the Q&A section on the Getting Started Page. Quote Link to comment
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