Hetzner: AX series - is RAID 1 mandatory?

Hello,

I am trying to get AX 41 from hetz but i see that they mentioned 'raid 1' in details page

and for me, using NVMe disk for backup looks funny

my doubt is.... is raid 1 mandatory there or they are just showing it for info purpose?

thanks

Comments

  • No,

    If you use their rescue system, and follow the prompts there, you can select your own level RAID, or pull it out of RAID entirely.

    Just takes a few more steps, and you'll be storted.

    Thanked by (1)seenu
  • maybe you know this but ill just include it as of maybe you missed it. and assuming you need it for backup

    @seenu said: using NVMe disk for backup looks funny

    you can click in 'storage' instead of 'high i/o' on the top of the page.
    it will convert the 2x 512G NVMe drives to 2x 2TP HDDs.

    Thanked by (1)Mulder
  • @seenu said: and for me, using NVMe disk for backup looks funny

    are you going to use AMD Ryzen 5 3600 for backup? that's crazy

  • @Mulder Nope, that's why I am asking a way to get rid of RAID 1 and use external backup solution :D

  • edited November 2020

    Raid is not for backup, it is for redundancy/performance.

    Thanked by (1)RapToN

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  • @seenu said: Nope, that's why I am asking a way to get rid of RAID 1 and use external backup solution

    take the NVMe in raid1 and upgrade https://www.hetzner.com/additional-hardware/ for backups

  • @chocolateshirt said: Raid is not for backup, it is for redundancy/performance.

    Honestly I am very new to word raid but from whatever i read online, RAID 1 makes copy of primary disk so can't we call it backup?

  • @seenu said:

    @chocolateshirt said: Raid is not for backup, it is for redundancy/performance.

    Honestly I am very new to word raid but from whatever i read online, RAID 1 makes copy of primary disk so can't we call it backup?

    No, for many reasons:
    It's in the same physical location and storage medium.
    Software errors and human ignorance will cause data loss.
    Etc.

    RAID is just for keeping stuff online, backups must always be done.

    Thanked by (1)seenu
  • Oh, i wil learn more about it.

  • @AC_Fan overall do you recommend, keeping it RAID 1 or no raid is also fine?

  • RAID 1 should improve read speeds with the proper drivers.

    Thanked by (2)seenu Falzo
  • @saibal said:
    RAID 1 should improve read speeds with the proper drivers.

    and saves your ass in case one drives suddenly dies.

    @AC_Fan pointed out, that is still a big difference to a proper backup though. you delete something on your raid 1 - it's gone, malware messes your data - your f*cked. your provider deadpools ... I think you get the idea, why raid-1 is not a backup but a redundancy to protect against SPOF.

    Thanked by (1)seenu
  • @seenu

    Hello from Mexico!

    I think it's really great that you are going to get your own server. I wish you the very best as you start on your very fun server journey!

    Maybe it might be helpful to you if we think about two different high level functions:

    The first function, backup, might be the ability to restore data if the data on the main machine is lost -- because a disk drive fails, because the datacenter building burns down, whatever.

    The second function, redundancy might be the ability of a machine to continue running despite failure of a key hardware component such as disk drive, power supply, network connection, etc.

    It might be fair to say that RAID is trying to address the second function (redundancy) but indirectly and partially addresses the first function (backup).

    What happens is that RAID "wastes" disk space by mirroring or striping multiple copies of the data on multiple disks. The result is that, when one disk goes down, the machine can continue to function because it still can access everything despite that one disk is gone. Maybe the dead disk can be hot swapped without even rebooting the machine. Once a new, working disk is present, RAID will copy everything to the new disk and return to having multiple copies of all the data.

    So maybe we can say that RAID provides a backup in the sense of redundancy but not in the "real" backup sense which permits data to be restored from remote backup which is completely isolated from the original machine's datacenter.

    An important factor in choosing whether "To RAID or not to RAID" (Hamlet) is how often your data changes. One guy doing programming might be quite happy with not using RAID and making a once a day, offsite backup. A bank, with many customers and thousands of transactions a second will want more than just one backup per day. Everybody falls somewhere along this continuum. Hetzner will let you set up your server with or without RAID, as you prefer.

    I know from previous discussions that you are interested in using Proxmox. You might want to check out this page on software RAID with Proxmox: https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Software_RAID

    Besides RAID, another factor to consider when selecting a server is "To ECC or not to ECC." AX41 comes with non-ECC memory. ECC is an upgrade. Here are links to a HN discussion of a page about ECC which I found helpful: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25167288 and https://danluu.com/why-ecc/

    There are different types of RAID and different types of ECC memory. I went with software RAID 1 and Proxmox on an AX51 server which has ECC as the default. So far, it works great!

    Folks here on LES who understand much more than I do: please correct the mistakes I made while trying to help @seenu .

    I hope this is helpful! Good luck with your new server!

    Thanked by (3)akhfa seenu AlanDS

    Tom. 穆坦然. Not Oles. Happy New York City guy visiting Mexico! How is your 文言文?
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  • @Not_Oles said:
    @seenu

    Hello from Mexico!

    I think it's really great that you are going to get your own server. I wish you the very best as you start on your very fun server journey!

    Maybe it might be helpful to you if we think about two different high level functions:

    The first function, backup, might be the ability to restore data if the data on the main machine is lost -- because a disk drive fails, because the datacenter building burns down, whatever.

    The second function, redundancy might be the ability of a machine to continue running despite failure of a key hardware component such as disk drive, power supply, network connection, etc.

    It might be fair to say that RAID is trying to address the second function (redundancy) but indirectly and partially addresses the first function (backup).

    What happens is that RAID "wastes" disk space by mirroring or striping multiple copies of the data on multiple disks. The result is that, when one disk goes down, the machine can continue to function because it still can access everything despite that one disk is gone. Maybe the dead disk can be hot swapped without even rebooting the machine. Once a new, working disk is present, RAID will copy everything to the new disk and return to having multiple copies of all the data.

    So maybe we can say that RAID provides a backup in the sense of redundancy but not in the "real" backup sense which permits data to be restored from remote backup which is completely isolated from the original machine's datacenter.

    An important factor in choosing whether "To RAID or not to RAID" (Hamlet) is how often your data changes. One guy doing programming might be quite happy with not using RAID and making a once a day, offsite backup. A bank, with many customers and thousands of transactions a second will want more than just one backup per day. Everybody falls somewhere along this continuum. Hetzner will let you set up your server with or without RAID, as you prefer.

    I know from previous discussions that you are interested in using Proxmox. You might want to check out this page on software RAID with Proxmox: https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Software_RAID

    Besides RAID, another factor to consider when selecting a server is "To ECC or not to ECC." AX41 comes with non-ECC memory. ECC is an upgrade. Here are links to a HN discussion of a page about ECC which I found helpful: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25167288 and https://danluu.com/why-ecc/

    There are different types of RAID and different types of ECC memory. I went with software RAID 1 and Proxmox on an AX51 server which has ECC as the default. So far, it works great!

    Folks here on LES who understand much more than I do: please correct the mistakes I made while trying to help @seenu .

    I hope this is helpful! Good luck with your new server!

    Just want to say, nice explanation here :)

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles
  • Thanks for great explanation and for taking your time to write such lengthy one @Not_Oles
    Highly appreciated <3

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles
  • yokowasisyokowasis Services Provider

    @Not_Oles said:
    @seenu

    Hello from Mexico!

    I think it's really great that you are going to get your own server. I wish you the very best as you start on your very fun server journey!

    Maybe it might be helpful to you if we think about two different high level functions:

    The first function, backup, might be the ability to restore data if the data on the main machine is lost -- because a disk drive fails, because the datacenter building burns down, whatever.

    The second function, redundancy might be the ability of a machine to continue running despite failure of a key hardware component such as disk drive, power supply, network connection, etc.

    It might be fair to say that RAID is trying to address the second function (redundancy) but indirectly and partially addresses the first function (backup).

    What happens is that RAID "wastes" disk space by mirroring or striping multiple copies of the data on multiple disks. The result is that, when one disk goes down, the machine can continue to function because it still can access everything despite that one disk is gone. Maybe the dead disk can be hot swapped without even rebooting the machine. Once a new, working disk is present, RAID will copy everything to the new disk and return to having multiple copies of all the data.

    So maybe we can say that RAID provides a backup in the sense of redundancy but not in the "real" backup sense which permits data to be restored from remote backup which is completely isolated from the original machine's datacenter.

    An important factor in choosing whether "To RAID or not to RAID" (Hamlet) is how often your data changes. One guy doing programming might be quite happy with not using RAID and making a once a day, offsite backup. A bank, with many customers and thousands of transactions a second will want more than just one backup per day. Everybody falls somewhere along this continuum. Hetzner will let you set up your server with or without RAID, as you prefer.

    I know from previous discussions that you are interested in using Proxmox. You might want to check out this page on software RAID with Proxmox: https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Software_RAID

    Besides RAID, another factor to consider when selecting a server is "To ECC or not to ECC." AX41 comes with non-ECC memory. ECC is an upgrade. Here are links to a HN discussion of a page about ECC which I found helpful: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25167288 and https://danluu.com/why-ecc/

    There are different types of RAID and different types of ECC memory. I went with software RAID 1 and Proxmox on an AX51 server which has ECC as the default. So far, it works great!

    Folks here on LES who understand much more than I do: please correct the mistakes I made while trying to help @seenu .

    I hope this is helpful! Good luck with your new server!

    Yes, yes, i see. hmmm.. Good. Perfection.

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles
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