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submitted 3 months ago by julian_hoch@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

This week, it finally happened. I think it’s the first time in 20 years that a hard drive has died on me without warning. And it was also the first time I was using an NVMe drive, but that could be a coincidence.

The drive was still under warranty (barely a year and a half old). I even had a spare lying around. But the true cost of restoration is, of course, my own labor. My planning had not been perfect (for such a remote event, as I had judged). However, it was easy enough. I simply installed NixOS from a USB loader and downloaded my configuration from my backup on my NAS (daily rsync jobs to the rescue). I also downloaded all the important files for my home directory. Then, it was simply a matter of adjusting a few things in the configuration file, rebuilding the system, and voilà. Well, except for a few things that didn’t work quite right for some reason and had to be manually fixed, but nothing major.

However, next time I want this to be even easier. It’s probably overkill to install a RAID controller and have multiple drives running in RAID1 or RAID5, but the restoration process is still too much manual work. I was thinking of regularly backing up my main drive on the block device level, so I would just have to swap out the drive and restore the delta from the backup. I’m not quite sure if that’s feasible or a good idea. For my personal system, I have to balance the investment of preparing for a disaster with the likelihood and impact of such an event. This seems like a good trade-off, but I would be curious to hear how other people prepare for drive failure.

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[-] catloaf@lemm.ee 19 points 3 months ago

RAID is not backup. RAID is to keep running until you can replace a drive with the spare on hand.

Software RAID is totally fine if that's what you want to run, no need for a raid controller.

Personally, I don't bother backing up my desktop systems, I only back up my server VMs. You might want to look at using Ansible to automate system deployment. I use Windows on my desktop, so I use group policy to configure a bunch of settings to my taste.

this post was submitted on 03 May 2025
34 points (94.7% liked)

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