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Raid disaster can strike during array rebuilding. It is an activity that takes much time and quite often results in drive failure. Moreover, rebuilding an array requires reading data from all disks opening a chance for a second drive failure and thus, the loss of an entire array. Another scenario for RAID 5 to fail is trying to force the array back online with one failed drive. Though the description of RAID 5 says that it can operate with one failed disk and most RAID 5 controllers, have a “force online” function, if the wrong drive is pushed back online first, it will corrupt the entire array within no time.
RAID 5 can fail due to the following primary reasons: •Failure of two drives at once. •Forcing RAID 5 array back online with a failed drive. Other more common reasons include: •Malfunctioned controller •Missing RAID partition •Incorrect RAID volume configuration
Recovering data from failed Server Do this: •Attach the disks one by one to a Windows PC either via internal ports or using an adaptor cable USB to SATA/IDE. This PC can be one of the clients, or a fresh installed Windows Home Server. Do not add this disk to the storage pool, before you have copied all data to the server share or external storage. The already configured storage pool devices must offer enough free space to handle the data from the disk besides old client backups (which will be lost in such a recovery scenario). •In Control Panel of that PC open Folder Options. •On the View tab select Show hidden files and folders. •Click OK.
•In Windows Explorer look for the DATA volume on the former Windows Home Server disk (including the D: drive of the former primary disk), which will usually have gotten a drive letter in the system. After opening this volume in Explorer you should see the hidden folder DE. (Be aware, that in configurations with multiple disks in the server this folder may not exist on each disk or be empty.) •Within the folder DE you should find a subfolder shares. •This contains parts or all (or none) of the data in the former shared folders or duplicates of this data (if Folder Duplication was selected). •Copy this data either to the new server installation by accessing the server shares through the desktop shortcut Shared Folders on server or to another storage location. Do never target the file system of drives belonging to Windows Home Server directly •Repeat this for each DATA disk
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