Critique My Backup and Storage Plan
- by MetaHyperBolic
My current storage (RAID-1 off of a hardware RAID card) and backup (a spare drive) solutions for my home network are inadequate. I have too much data scattered on various one-off drives. It is time to evolve. Backups seem simple enough, at least: lots of big drives. However, I am bewildered by the number of choices for small home storage. The Drobo S looks appealing. So does the ReadyNAS. I am not looking for bunches of shiny features, I'm mostly interested in reliability. I am not interested in building Yet Another PC to create a file server or doing something in the cloud, or whatever. I'm stupid, so I am keeping it simple.
Requirements for Main Volume:
Starting working space roughly 2TB, with options for growth up to 5TB
RAID or something RAID-like with at
least one parity drive
eSATA II for speed during backups
Ability to shut down gracefully when
alerted of low power by a UPS
Optional but Desirable: Will take
2TB drives now with options for the
larger 3TB drives coming in
2010-2011
Optional but Desirable: : RAID-6 or
something similar, with two parity
drives
Optional but Desirable: : Hot spare
Ethernet connection not required, as
the volume will be shared via the
same machines which runs my home
print server
Backups:
Backup performed via ROBOCOPY in
mirror mode to an external hard
drive via a eSATA II connection.
Start with rotating between two
external 2TB hard drives, will go up
to six external 2TB drives.
Start with a weekly backup, move to
a bi-weekly backup as more drives
are added.
Move to 3TB drives as the size of my
main volume increases.
Backup drives will be stored on an
off-site location.
Hard drives:
I plan on buying all of the same
model, but different batches from
different vendors.
I found a "burn-in" utility with
which I can pound away on the drives
for a couple of weeks before adding
them to the backup pool or the main
volume.
I estimate that I am looking at roughly $1,500 to start, once I start throwing in two TB drives for backup and four for storage. So, are there any obvious flaws in my plan? What have I overlooked? Any suggestions for the storage device for my main volume that fits my requirements? Or do I just keep it simple, 2 drives in RAID-1, then perform due diligence with my backups, accepting that I will have to buy a whole new unit when my data grows past 2TB?