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Author Stupid question on Storage Virtualization
Jay

2004-05-30, 11:11 am

Lets say I have 4 - 200 GB drives on my Win 2003 server (C,D,E,F), I want to
combine all 4 of them so I can have a C drive that is 800 GB. I can do NTSF
mounts, but then i need to have sub directories, I just want one big volume.
I don't want to use any RAID card to create a RAID array at this point. So
my question is, is there any software out their that will allow me to
achieve this.

Thanks
Jay


Nik Simpson

2004-05-30, 11:11 am

Jay wrote:
> Lets say I have 4 - 200 GB drives on my Win 2003 server (C,D,E,F), I
> want to combine all 4 of them so I can have a C drive that is 800 GB.
> I can do NTSF mounts, but then i need to have sub directories, I just
> want one big volume. I don't want to use any RAID card to create a
> RAID array at this point. So my question is, is there any software
> out their that will allow me to achieve this.


With Win 2003 Server you have two options:

1. In volume manager create a software RAID 0 stripe of 800GB

2. In volume manager create a software RAID 5 stripe of 600GB


--
Nik Simpson


Benno...

2004-05-30, 11:11 am

Nik Simpson wrote:

>
>
> With Win 2003 Server you have two options:
>
> 1. In volume manager create a software RAID 0 stripe of 800GB
>
> 2. In volume manager create a software RAID 5 stripe of 600GB


You can do this with your BOOT partition/drive as well? And on an
existing system?
Nik Simpson

2004-05-30, 11:11 am

Benno... wrote:
> Nik Simpson wrote:
>
>
> You can do this with your BOOT partition/drive as well? And on an
> existing system?


With an existing filesystem, I think the best you could do is create a
volume set, but you should be able to check in the Help for the Volume
manager.


--
Nik Simpson


Jay

2004-05-30, 11:11 am

I will try this, basically I got 4 External Firewire drives, right now the
best I could do is do a NTFS mount since I have a boot drive. The next
quesiton will be if I were to remove the FW drives and plug into another
box, can the same RAID-0 be maintained.

Jay



"Nik Simpson" <n_simpson@bellsouth.net> wrote in message
news:p64qc.11800$yF6.3569@bignews5.bellsouth.net...
> Benno... wrote:
>
> With an existing filesystem, I think the best you could do is create a
> volume set, but you should be able to check in the Help for the Volume
> manager.
>
>
> --
> Nik Simpson
>
>



Nik Simpson

2004-05-30, 11:11 am

Jay wrote:
> I will try this, basically I got 4 External Firewire drives, right
> now the best I could do is do a NTFS mount since I have a boot drive.
> The next quesiton will be if I were to remove the FW drives and plug
> into another box, can the same RAID-0 be maintained.
>

I beleive you can import a RAID set from one system to another, the
information about the "set" is stored on the drives for just this reason.


--
Nik Simpson


Malcolm Weir

2004-05-30, 11:11 am

On Mon, 17 May 2004 03:29:20 GMT, "Jay" <jay@objectcube.com> wrote:

>Lets say I have 4 - 200 GB drives on my Win 2003 server (C,D,E,F), I want to
>combine all 4 of them so I can have a C drive that is 800 GB. I can do NTSF
>mounts, but then i need to have sub directories, I just want one big volume.
>I don't want to use any RAID card to create a RAID array at this point. So
>my question is, is there any software out their that will allow me to
>achieve this.


Yup. IIRC, there's a command that's standard on Win 2003 called
"diskraid"....

There are likely restrictions on which disks it will work with (e.g.
the earlier Win2000 equivalent refused to work with USB or Firewire
disks, because it considered them removable).

>Jay


Malc.
Boll Weevil

2004-07-10, 5:48 pm

On Mon, 17 May 2004 11:52:24 -0400, "Nik Simpson"
<n_simpson@bellsouth.net> wrote:

>Jay wrote:
>I beleive you can import a RAID set from one system to another, the
>information about the "set" is stored on the drives for just this reason.


The RAID set info is very important and you can backup the info from
Windows volume manager. All you need is a floppy to export the volume
set info and then you just take it with you where ever you firewire
drives go.

the bug
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