R
Ron
05/22
Greetings. Despite having become 'fairly' comfortable with
using/configuring arrays...I find myself wondering about something:
Originally, I put in ONE serialATA drive. Then I added a second drive some
time later, and successfully created a mirrored array [with no loss of data
on drive #1].
I am casually thinking about removing drive #2 for temp duty in a friend's
computer. If I power down and remove the drive, then restart, the BIOS will
perceive the anomaly and warn me that the set is faulty. If I ignore the
warning, the comp should still boot normally. (Right?)
But in this scenario, the Sil BIOS still believes there is a [faulty]
array...unless I delete
the array. But is this possible with no loss of data? Can I simply say
"Hey - Sil - forget about that other drive. Just run with a single, OK?"
And if so...at what point can I perform this step? Can I do it before I
remove the other drive?
Or maybe it doesn't matter. Maybe this will go smoothly -- (as if) -- and I
can just delete the array without opening the case or anything...and the
second drive will revert to an available storage location!
Please advise.
TIA
Ron
Greetings. Despite having become 'fairly' comfortable with
using/configuring arrays...I find myself wondering about something:
Originally, I put in ONE serialATA drive. Then I added a second drive some
time later, and successfully created a mirrored array [with no loss of data
on drive #1].
I am casually thinking about removing drive #2 for temp duty in a friend's
computer. If I power down and remove the drive, then restart, the BIOS will
perceive the anomaly and warn me that the set is faulty. If I ignore the
warning, the comp should still boot normally. (Right?)
But in this scenario, the Sil BIOS still believes there is a [faulty]
array...unless I delete
the array. But is this possible with no loss of data? Can I simply say
"Hey - Sil - forget about that other drive. Just run with a single, OK?"
And if so...at what point can I perform this step? Can I do it before I
remove the other drive?
Or maybe it doesn't matter. Maybe this will go smoothly -- (as if) -- and I
can just delete the array without opening the case or anything...and the
second drive will revert to an available storage location!
Please advise.
TIA
Ron