I've been forced to use IDE RAID due to cost and capacity. I'm honestly not too keen on the whole IDE RAID thing, myself. Promise puts the drive hashes on the controller, which means that if your controller dies - you're screwed. You can't replace the controller and get your data back. Its basically software raid, but with a controller card. If you're doing anything mission critical, I'd really recommend going with a "real" hardware RAID solution. Accusys makes a nice external RAID controller (SCSI), as does Infortrend - but they don't come cheap. If you're stuck with IDE, Promise makes their RM4000, RM8000 and RM15000 external arrays which, in my opinion, are really cool. Again, they aren't cheap, but really, really nice. I'm currently using several of these. Mike. On Thu, 2003-12-11 at 15:00, Hans Müller wrote: > Am Donnerstag 11 Dezember 2003 21:24 schrieb mike webster: > > If you're looking for SCSI, go with adaptec. For a simple ide solution > > with two drives I'd recommend the Promise TX-2000 card. I've written up > > a howto: for the promise card if you'd like the link. > > > > Mike. > > > > On Thu, 2003-12-11 at 14:26, Raymond Norton wrote: > > > I have decided to do a hardware raid rather than struggle with the > > > software raid. What would be a good, inexpensive controller that can do > > > raid level 1? > when you use SCSI Vortex or Adaptec. > when ATA or SATA then use 3ware. 3ware contolleres are seen by linux as a real > raid conroller. The promise contoller somtimes show not the raid array but > the disk. and when then you try to acces disk disk you can destroy your > array. > > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list >