Save yourself a headache and use btrfs/zfs with periodically checks as suggested in another post.
Who cares if it is a problem or not when it has a simple and inexpensive solution.
Comment on Is bit rot really a threat that I should worry about?
mouse@midwest.social 1 year agoThat is a very good question, it makes me think of better organization for my data. Data such as task lists, and daily notes aren’t necessarily very important, while family photos and documents would be more important.
Save yourself a headache and use btrfs/zfs with periodically checks as suggested in another post.
Who cares if it is a problem or not when it has a simple and inexpensive solution.
SeriousBug@infosec.pub 1 year ago
For any family photos and documents you can’t afford to lose, make sure you have backups of it. A RAID array does not mean you don’t need backups: you want at least 3 copies, at least one offsite.
The copy in your RAID array is one copy. You can back that up to an external hard drive or something as a second copy. Then have an offsite backup on something like Backblaze as your third copy.
mouse@midwest.social 1 year ago
Thanks for the reassurance. What I currently have is exactly that, RAID for the local data, and a spare drive that is mounted and unmount when data is backed up, and that is rsynced offsite to a cloud provider. I figured that my current setup was really reliable as I had slowly been researching and working on this over a few years.
I have a sort of itch to play with a mini PC, I guess it would be best not to hurt any of my important data by downgrading the setup, however this is a good time to really sort and figure out what I need and is important and what isn’t as important and can be reobtained if something fails on the mini PC.