here's my ideal scenario:
disk#1 (probably designated as C: ) bootable, two mirrored drives for speed (raptors)
disk#2 doesnt need to be bootable, two mirrored drives for reliability
disk#3 doesnt need to be bootable, two mirrored drives for reliability
disk#4 bootable, single drive, hot swappable, can be as large as 750gb
disk#5 bootable, single drive, hot swappable, can be as large as 750gb
here are additional requests:
- all drives are sata
- all disks should be accessible without additional drivers in windows and at bios level. in other words, if disk#1 crashes its possible to boot from #4 or from #5 or from a vanilla or acronis cd and restore disk#1 from an acronis backup
- disks #1, #4 and #5 should be bootable independently from each other, directly from bios. eg solution where disk#1 loads something like partition magic and then lets you boot from an alternate device wouldnt work for me. yet, i dont mind if in order to switch boot device i have to dive into bios settings and change an option (i.e. no need for there to be a dedicated boot menu, although it would be nice if there was)
- i'd like mirroring to be done by hardware. so it probably means i'll need to invest in an adapter card. i've seen a few in $300-600 range. thats perfectly acceptable, in fact i'd pay more for quality hardware that provides these features.
- the card should be able to warn of drive failure (within a mirrored set) and hopefully let me exchange for a new one, and keep working on a single drive while i'm ordering the new drive from newegg (not talking hot swap, of course)
- i'm not looking necessarily for a "single adapter magic solution" even though it would be nice. for instance one scenario i've been thinking about is, to find a motherboard with built in sata mirroring controllers (in fact i have today an asus motherboard which has two separate sata raid adapters) for disks#1, #4 and #5 and a separate adapter card for drives #2 and #3. if that is what needs to happen i need advice on choosing the motherboard. this time around it'll have to be intel-based, because for this system refresh i'm looking to get an intel 6600-ish cpu.
if i'm leaving anything out, please let me know.
and thanks for reading the whole thing to the end
disk#1 (probably designated as C: ) bootable, two mirrored drives for speed (raptors)
disk#2 doesnt need to be bootable, two mirrored drives for reliability
disk#3 doesnt need to be bootable, two mirrored drives for reliability
disk#4 bootable, single drive, hot swappable, can be as large as 750gb
disk#5 bootable, single drive, hot swappable, can be as large as 750gb
here are additional requests:
- all drives are sata
- all disks should be accessible without additional drivers in windows and at bios level. in other words, if disk#1 crashes its possible to boot from #4 or from #5 or from a vanilla or acronis cd and restore disk#1 from an acronis backup
- disks #1, #4 and #5 should be bootable independently from each other, directly from bios. eg solution where disk#1 loads something like partition magic and then lets you boot from an alternate device wouldnt work for me. yet, i dont mind if in order to switch boot device i have to dive into bios settings and change an option (i.e. no need for there to be a dedicated boot menu, although it would be nice if there was)
- i'd like mirroring to be done by hardware. so it probably means i'll need to invest in an adapter card. i've seen a few in $300-600 range. thats perfectly acceptable, in fact i'd pay more for quality hardware that provides these features.
- the card should be able to warn of drive failure (within a mirrored set) and hopefully let me exchange for a new one, and keep working on a single drive while i'm ordering the new drive from newegg (not talking hot swap, of course)
- i'm not looking necessarily for a "single adapter magic solution" even though it would be nice. for instance one scenario i've been thinking about is, to find a motherboard with built in sata mirroring controllers (in fact i have today an asus motherboard which has two separate sata raid adapters) for disks#1, #4 and #5 and a separate adapter card for drives #2 and #3. if that is what needs to happen i need advice on choosing the motherboard. this time around it'll have to be intel-based, because for this system refresh i'm looking to get an intel 6600-ish cpu.
if i'm leaving anything out, please let me know.
and thanks for reading the whole thing to the end