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Hi,
Nothing in there showing updates of the situation and the page was:
" This page was last modified on 6 May 2018, at 21:09."
Does that page need updates?
To me, it's not that clear.
Drive "self-healing" is certainly a modern feature of drives, so just
trying to exercise the data will get some problems fixed. I too
thought though that having using RAID would allow some level of
protection against partial or full drive failure. Was a fan of ZFS in
the Solaris world, not happy with Oracle's licensing of said feature
and never trusted BTRFS. I know there are other implementations of
ZFS, but there is the worry about not having ECC type RAM and the
amount of RAM you need to operate well with ZFS (something that may
have improved over the years, I just don't know).
The self-healing magic, one would expect, would allow for some kind of
checksumming to be present, but it needs to report errors back to the
driver so that the same data otherwise "protected" by RAID can
determine if a good copy of the data is available. That would help
with data integrity.
For many years, data has only been somewhat protected by RAID and it's
perhaps a miracle that more data hasn't been lost, or rather more
likely that bit rot and other failures go on being undetected even
with RAID level scrubbing. A "clean" state for an MDADM RAID
volume.... can't be trusted?
Kind Regards
AndrewM
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