Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/07/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Alastair, What an awful ordeal. I hope you didn't loose any images and just the LR catalogue (I couldn't really tell from the post). I think having multiple catalogues is a great idea; one that I'll implement now that I've read your post. I did a lot of thinking about data storage too. What is currently working for me (and I knock on wood?daily) is having directories for each year of photo's.?At the end of each year, I make a copy of that year's photos onto a hard drive (not WD as it seems to have some kind of proprietary code; I use G-Drives) and store it off site. For current year images, before I copy them at the end of the year, I work on them locally; on?an external HDD via FW attached to my?Macbook Pro. Weekly I backup these files to another HDD kept off site. My prior year files are moved to a RAID storage device so that I can access them currently (remember the backups are kept off site). I also, at the end?of the year backup what's on the raid to a large HDD and keep off site. So basically I end up with: - Current year's files: on local HDD and on off site HDD backed up every few weeks. - Prior year files: on local RAID, orignal HDD and cumulative HDD kept off site. I'm hoping this is enough. Some day moving to the "cloud" may offer an additional form of redundancy, but for now it is too slow and too expensive for large quantities of RAW files. It would also help if I went through and?deleted a bunch of "loosers", but I never did that with negatives and am reticent to do that with files. Good luck and let us know how it all turns out. Bob ?Bob Adler Palo Alto, CA http://www.rgaphoto.com ________________________________ From: "afirkin at afirkin.com" <afirkin at afirkin.com> To: Leica Users Group <lug at leica-users.org> Sent: Mon, July 19, 2010 5:38:25 AM Subject: [Leica] World of pain I know some of you will probably say: "the idiot deserves all he gets", but boy am I in a 'world of pain'. A month or so ago, my firewire RAID mirrored light room catelog was becoming very full. I decided to back up the RAID disks by 1. copying the files onto another disk 2. removing one of the RAID disks and letting the RAID re-mirror the data 3. storing the now spare disk from the RAID in a safe place. All sounded like "overkill", but I really wanted to 'get it right'. So first phase, I bought 2 terabyte WD disks and installed them into my firewire 800 WD my book to make a 1TB raid rather than my mirrored 500 gig RAIDS. So far so good. I then "dropped" the files from "photoRaid1" onto it copied the files overnight, and the next morning started the same process for "photoRaid2". I removed the first my book Raid and replaced one of the disks with a "clean" one and left it to "mirror" (said by wd to take 8 hours or so). Next day photoRaid2 was copied, and there was still a lot of space on the 1TB disk. Oh dear. I did a detailed check of the disk and found that PhotoRaid1 had not fully copied across. No warning, just 'stopped' half way in. No panic, I should now have 3 disks with the data. WRONG. The mirror did not work. I should have panicked right then, but no, I replaced the disk and fired up photoRaid1 again. BUT the mirroring or something had corrupted the disks. The message said: you cannot now copy to this disk, so we suggest you get the data off "quick" or words to that effect. I tried, but could only find 80%. Now terrified, I sought professional help. A week later the "pro" said he could not find anything on any of the 3 disks. So much for RAID protection. Seems the mirroring is not as simple as I had been led to believe. Since then, I've been DESPERATELY trying to find a way to store my data safely. I've re-built the entire lightroom catelog of 55000 images onto an ethernet WD sharedisc 2TB RAID. Now I'm trying to back up those files and the ethernet bank of disks has gone on a GO SLOW. It took 10 minutes for it to even recognise that there were photos in the folders, and it would not copy. So now, I'm desperately AND SLOWLY exporting all the files off the ethernet RAID back onto firewire RAIDS. Its so slow and I'm now so paranoid that my every waking moment is consumed. When I finally finish, I will have a new LR catelog, I will split that into 3 main sub catelogs, and I will back it up on 200 disks ;-) well perhaps not 200, but at this stage I would just love the copying of files from one HD to another to go smoothly. Sorry for the rant, but I have a lot of time at the moment sitting watching it copy files to the next disk. I might even have time to read my LUG mail. Yours TOTALLY CONSUMED Alastair _______________________________________________ Leica Users Group. See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information