<div>>All storage will die eventually. Thats why you backup the stuff you can't replace,<br class="Apple-interchange-newline"></div><div><br></div>I would avoid raid for mythtv, its just not necessary and can result in file fragmentation.<div>
I run 5 x 130Gb drives mounted as separate storage groups. That means I can record 5 programs at once and each is written to a different spindle.</div><div>This means the files never get fragmented and the performance is out of this world.</div>
<div><div>You can pick up an old DELL server on trademe for a couple of hundred bucks and build the ultimate mythbackend.</div><div>I am running VMWare on mine, so I can also experiment with a non production version of Myth on the same physical box or other virtual appliances.</div>
<br class="Apple-interchange-newline"></div><div>Also, if I have a HD failure, I would only lose 1/5th of my recordings, not really the end of the world given anything important can be downloaded easily.</div><div>This configuration gives far superior performance for mythtv than any RAID setup ever will and provides adequate redundancy.<br>
it also means if anything goes down, I just slot in a new disk, mount it and I'm away again in 10 minutes, far quicker than rebuilding RAID arrays.</div><div>I backup my OS, database and configuration to a USB flash drive and also put a whole backup of the boot VMDK file on their every night.</div>
<div>so if I lose the OS, I just reinstall mythbuntu (I leave the disk in the CD tray) and restore from the backup or I can put in a new disk and copy the VMDK file across (i boot vmware off a USB flash disk) and I'm away again in 15 minutes.<br>
<br></div><div>Sometimes keeping it simple works the best.</div><div><br></div><div>Toby</div>