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EDIT: people didn't like my humor. Well, look, the whole thing that you're buying with a raid controller is...redundancy. So if it's not redundant, failing silently, while telling you it's being redundant, how is this different from, say, paying for a house inspection that doesn't get done? If a raid controller is allowed to silently fail, it becomes a post-experience good. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experience_good Meaning that even while you're using it, you have no idea if it works. My contention is that it's not a raid array if it can silently stop being redundant without telling you. At best it's an Possibly Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks. (The below is how my comment first read.) (sarcastic) Yeah, it's only prudent to grab a drive out from time to time and make a surprise inspection of whether it's actually filled up a full 4/5th of the way (or whatever) with the actual data the volume is supposed to contain! And the remaining fifth had better look a damn sight like parity information! Seriously though, a controller that fails like this isn't a RAID controller, since what separates it from a paper plate and a cardboard box. On the paper plate you write "RAID controller" and tape it to an already attached hard drive, and you put the remaining members of the redundant array into the cardboard box. No setup or even connection required! seriously seriously though, what you're suggesting is unacceptable. that's not a raid controller, that's a scam. |