Archived from groups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage (
More info?)
Previously pivo <aivkov@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks for the information...
> So, essentially if I have a big raid array sitting off of my
> motherboard's raid controller I can't really change motherboards
> without big hassle of moving data somewhere safe, reformatting the
> array and moving data back in.
Exactly. And a real risk of loosing the data if the mainboard breaks.
One of the reasons I don't like hardware-RAID: You need to have a
spare controller or you are at least locked-in to one manufacturer.
If you know what you are doing, you can usually still recover an array
without the original hardware, but people that use these low-cost
RAIDs often do not know and can only try to buy the same hardware
that just broke on them again. Not pretty at all.
> What was these freaking manufactures were thinking about?
The usual: Screwing over the customer if profitable as long
as the customer does not notice too early. One of the pleasures
of "Industry Standards". _I_ can recover my LINUX software
RAIDs on any computer I can connect enough of the drives to or
even with several computers connected over a network. Of course
that does not sound right to hardware-RAID vendors. After all
you would not be vendor-locked anymore.
> Sorry for the rant, thanks for the anwer ...
No problem on both counts.
Arno