OK so in my (admittedly basic) understanding of raidz and raidz2, these technologies are very similar to raid5 and raid6. BUT if you set up one disk as a raidz vdev, you (obviously) can't maintain data after a disk failure, but you are protected against data corruption that is NOT a result of disk failure. Right?
So is there a resource somewhere that I could look at that clearly spells out how many disks I could have vs. how much resulting space I would have that would still protect me against disk failure (a la the "Drobolator" http://www.drobo.com/drobolator/index.html)? I mean, if I have a raidz vdev with one disk, then I add a disk, am I protected from disk failure? Is it the case that I need to have disks in groups of 4 to maintain protection against single disk failure with raidz and in groups of 5 for raidz2? It gets even more confusing if I wanted to add disks of varying sizes... And you said I could add a disk (or disks) to a mirror -- can I force add a disk (or disks) to a raidz or raidz2? Without destroying and rebuilding as I read would be required somewhere else? And if I create a zpool and add various single disks to it (without creating raidz/mirror/etc), is it the case that the zpool is essentially functioning like spanning raid? Ie, no protection at all?? Please either point me to an existing resource that spells this out a little clearer or give me a little more explanation around it. And... do you think that the Drobo (www.drobo.com) product is essentially just a box with OpenSolaris and ZFS on it? This message posted from opensolaris.org _______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss