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    Synology crashed disk this morning

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    • guyinpvG
      guyinpv @travisdh1
      last edited by

      @travisdh1 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

      If the drive is to the point of showing bad sectors to the Synology unit, the drive should be considered defective. It's run out of the factory assigned spare sectors, and is now having to dip into actual storage space to spare out sectors. If it's under warranty, time for a warranty exchange. If it's not under warranty, time to think about it's replacement.

      Being that it's RAID0, it shouldn't be important data anyway, right? (Something like backup staging area?)

      The drive is only about 3 or 4 months old as far as when I actually bought it. Not sure how old it is on the store shelf!

      Is there a way to verify this somehow? Does DSM have a test feature that will prove a failure for purposes of warranty replacement? I hate that a drive MEANT for NAS boxes is showing failure in only 3 months of barely any use.
      How common is it to see a failure this soon?

      Also, you're telling me that because DSM knows there is a bad sector, the drive has completely filled up it's normal list of bad sectors? Not sure what you mean here. Some bad sectors Synology wouldn't otherwise be aware of?

      travisdh1T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • travisdh1T
        travisdh1 @guyinpv
        last edited by travisdh1

        @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

        @travisdh1 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

        If the drive is to the point of showing bad sectors to the Synology unit, the drive should be considered defective. It's run out of the factory assigned spare sectors, and is now having to dip into actual storage space to spare out sectors. If it's under warranty, time for a warranty exchange. If it's not under warranty, time to think about it's replacement.

        Being that it's RAID0, it shouldn't be important data anyway, right? (Something like backup staging area?)

        The drive is only about 3 or 4 months old as far as when I actually bought it. Not sure how old it is on the store shelf!

        Is there a way to verify this somehow? Does DSM have a test feature that will prove a failure for purposes of warranty replacement? I hate that a drive MEANT for NAS boxes is showing failure in only 3 months of barely any use.
        How common is it to see a failure this soon?

        Fairly common. Which model of drive is it exactly? I ask because 'NAS' drives are really the same hardware inside, but with TLER turned on in the firmware. Which is actually kinda worthless for a RAID0. Being only 3 months, you're still in the early stages where failures are common. Almost all drives have a "bathtub curve" where failure rates are more common in the first few months, become very rare for most of the expected lifetime, and then start failing as hardware wears out. BackBlaze give you some nice graphics explaining it.

        Also, you're telling me that because DSM knows there is a bad sector, the drive has completely filled up it's normal list of bad sectors? Not sure what you mean here. Some bad sectors Synology wouldn't otherwise be aware of?

        I'd have to check the SMART stats to be certain, but yes. The drive exhausts it's reallocatable sectors and will then start reporting them to the system. I know I've seen this behavior with WD Red, Green, and Blue drives at least.

        guyinpvG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • guyinpvG
          guyinpv @travisdh1
          last edited by

          @travisdh1

          I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

          JaredBuschJ 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • JaredBuschJ
            JaredBusch @guyinpv
            last edited by

            @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

            @travisdh1

            I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

            Yes. Replace it. Unless your data means nothing. In which case, why have the data.

            IRJI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • DustinB3403D
              DustinB3403
              last edited by

              @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

              @travisdh1

              I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

              Why would use use RAID0 and then question if the drive needs to be replaced?

              guyinpvG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • IRJI
                IRJ @JaredBusch
                last edited by

                @JaredBusch said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                @travisdh1

                I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

                Yes. Replace it. Unless your data means nothing. In which case, why have the data.

                This

                Why would you even want a somewhat questionable drive?

                guyinpvG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • guyinpvG
                  guyinpv @IRJ
                  last edited by

                  @IRJ said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                  @JaredBusch said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                  @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                  @travisdh1

                  I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

                  Yes. Replace it. Unless your data means nothing. In which case, why have the data.

                  This

                  Why would you even want a somewhat questionable drive?

                  Because it's normal for drives to have bad sectors. They get marked and life goes on. If basic and advanced SMART scans continue to say the drive is normal, and even manufacturer utility tests say it's good, how am I supposed to warranty it? Some tool has to declare the drive is bad.

                  IRJI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • guyinpvG
                    guyinpv @DustinB3403
                    last edited by

                    @DustinB3403 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                    @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                    @travisdh1

                    I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

                    Why would use use RAID0 and then question if the drive needs to be replaced?

                    Huh?

                    DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • IRJI
                      IRJ @guyinpv
                      last edited by IRJ

                      @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                      @IRJ said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                      @JaredBusch said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                      @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                      @travisdh1

                      I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

                      Yes. Replace it. Unless your data means nothing. In which case, why have the data.

                      This

                      Why would you even want a somewhat questionable drive?

                      Because it's normal for drives to have bad sectors. They get marked and life goes on. If basic and advanced SMART scans continue to say the drive is normal, and even manufacturer utility tests say it's good, how am I supposed to warranty it? Some tool has to declare the drive is bad.

                      That is why you have high availability on anything important.

                      guyinpvG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • guyinpvG
                        guyinpv @IRJ
                        last edited by

                        @IRJ said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                        @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                        @IRJ said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                        @JaredBusch said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                        @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                        @travisdh1

                        I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

                        Yes. Replace it. Unless your data means nothing. In which case, why have the data.

                        This

                        Why would you even want a somewhat questionable drive?

                        Because it's normal for drives to have bad sectors. They get marked and life goes on. If basic and advanced SMART scans continue to say the drive is normal, and even manufacturer utility tests say it's good, how am I supposed to warranty it? Some tool has to declare the drive is bad.

                        That is why you have high availability on anything important.

                        OK but that's not relevant.

                        This thread isn't about merits of backup strategies or opinions on RAID0, etc.

                        I'm wondering if other Synology users see DSM listing bad sectors, whether it's normal, how many are acceptable, and so on. I've even read some places that Synology can create the bad sectors via it's own reading/writing errors and they aren't "really" bad sectors at all.
                        Some people take such drives and do a wipe on another computer and reinstall to Synology and it's back to normal, no bad sectors.
                        Some people I've read are still using drives with over 3,000 bad sector count! Some others have hundreds or over a thousand of their own.

                        Opinions range from "replace immediately" to "format it, test it and reuse". Some people say to trust the advanced SMART scan and some say SMART means nothing. Some say 1 bad sector means the internal supply of spare sectors is out and this is the beginning of the end, some say it's just fine and normal.

                        What I'm looking for is actual experience or official recommendations from Synology. They don't seem to have a public post about it so I may have to do a support ticket to get answers. I'm wondering if anybody else here has drives in their Synology that show bad sectors. Plenty of people I've read continue to use drives with a count >1 and don't report issues.

                        travisdh1T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • travisdh1T
                          travisdh1 @guyinpv
                          last edited by

                          @guyinpv Did the Synology come with the drives already installed? If so I'd ask support. If they didn't come with the Synology I'd ask the vendor support.

                          What is the reallocated sector count in the SMART statistics?

                          guyinpvG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • guyinpvG
                            guyinpv @travisdh1
                            last edited by

                            @travisdh1 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                            @guyinpv Did the Synology come with the drives already installed? If so I'd ask support. If they didn't come with the Synology I'd ask the vendor support.

                            What is the reallocated sector count in the SMART statistics?

                            It's actually performing the advanced SMART tests right now, at 40% complete. I'll know in a little bit the final details.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • DustinB3403D
                              DustinB3403 @guyinpv
                              last edited by

                              @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                              @DustinB3403 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                              @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                              @travisdh1

                              I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

                              Why would use use RAID0 and then question if the drive needs to be replaced?

                              Huh?

                              It was a bit tongue in cheek, RAID0 provides no protection against a drive failure, one drive has partially failed. So you've likely lost the data that was in that section of the disk.

                              And you've asked if you should retry the drive, or replace the drive.

                              guyinpvG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • guyinpvG
                                guyinpv @DustinB3403
                                last edited by

                                @DustinB3403 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                @DustinB3403 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                @travisdh1

                                I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

                                Why would use use RAID0 and then question if the drive needs to be replaced?

                                Huh?

                                It was a bit tongue in cheek, RAID0 provides no protection against a drive failure, one drive has partially failed. So you've likely lost the data that was in that section of the disk.

                                And you've asked if you should retry the drive, or replace the drive.

                                Well that's what threw me off. Even with the error and the message that it was "crashed", I could access all the files just fine. The shared folders were there, etc. It was even telling me to copy the files off just in case. So on one hand it said there was a crash, on the other hand, nothing was broken.

                                Many people said they just took out the drive and reinserted it and all was well. This is what I did and it came back to life, verified the RAID and so the only issue is that it now lists one bad sector on drive 2.

                                DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • DustinB3403D
                                  DustinB3403 @guyinpv
                                  last edited by

                                  @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                  @DustinB3403 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                  @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                  @DustinB3403 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                  @guyinpv said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                  @travisdh1

                                  I guess the question is, does the sucker really need replaced? I mean really? Is this considered a "bad" drive and be covered by a warranty? I have my doubts. If I tell them "DSM says it has a bad sector, can you replace it?" They might laugh at me.

                                  Why would use use RAID0 and then question if the drive needs to be replaced?

                                  Huh?

                                  It was a bit tongue in cheek, RAID0 provides no protection against a drive failure, one drive has partially failed. So you've likely lost the data that was in that section of the disk.

                                  And you've asked if you should retry the drive, or replace the drive.

                                  Well that's what threw me off. Even with the error and the message that it was "crashed", I could access all the files just fine. The shared folders were there, etc. It was even telling me to copy the files off just in case. So on one hand it said there was a crash, on the other hand, nothing was broken.

                                  Many people said they just took out the drive and reinserted it and all was well. This is what I did and it came back to life, verified the RAID and so the only issue is that it now lists one bad sector on drive 2.

                                  My point is, if you care about the data, don't use RAID0.

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • DustinB3403D
                                    DustinB3403
                                    last edited by

                                    A single drive would be safer compared to RAID0, because with RAID0 if a drive does go, you lose all of the data stored on that drive.

                                    Guessing that this is a 2-drive unit you have what 8TB max in this unit (2x4TB raid0)?

                                    Just purchase a single 8TB drive.

                                    stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • stacksofplatesS
                                      stacksofplates @DustinB3403
                                      last edited by

                                      @DustinB3403 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                      A single drive would be safer compared to RAID0, because with RAID0 if a drive does go, you lose all of the data stored on that drive.

                                      Guessing that this is a 2-drive unit you have what 8TB max in this unit (2x4TB raid0)?

                                      Just purchase a single 8TB drive.

                                      A single drive is not safer because if the drive goes you still lose all of the data on that drive.

                                      brianlittlejohnB DustinB3403D 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • brianlittlejohnB
                                        brianlittlejohn @stacksofplates
                                        last edited by

                                        @stacksofplates said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                        @DustinB3403 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                        A single drive would be safer compared to RAID0, because with RAID0 if a drive does go, you lose all of the data stored on that drive.

                                        Guessing that this is a 2-drive unit you have what 8TB max in this unit (2x4TB raid0)?

                                        Just purchase a single 8TB drive.

                                        A single drive is not safer because if the drive goes you still lose all of the data on that drive.

                                        It is because in raid 0 any one of the drives die you lose all the data... 2 drive raid, twice as likely for a failure.

                                        stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • DustinB3403D
                                          DustinB3403 @stacksofplates
                                          last edited by

                                          @stacksofplates said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                          @DustinB3403 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                          A single drive would be safer compared to RAID0, because with RAID0 if a drive does go, you lose all of the data stored on that drive.

                                          Guessing that this is a 2-drive unit you have what 8TB max in this unit (2x4TB raid0)?

                                          Just purchase a single 8TB drive.

                                          A single drive is not safer because if the drive goes you still lose all of the data on that drive.

                                          With a single drive, you have a lower chance of failure (raid controllers, drive issues whatever) And a single drive is easily copied from for backup purposes.

                                          You get an equal size drive, and robocopy or DD all of the data.

                                          Backup done.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • stacksofplatesS
                                            stacksofplates @brianlittlejohn
                                            last edited by

                                            @brianlittlejohn said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                            @stacksofplates said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                            @DustinB3403 said in Synology crashed disk this morning:

                                            A single drive would be safer compared to RAID0, because with RAID0 if a drive does go, you lose all of the data stored on that drive.

                                            Guessing that this is a 2-drive unit you have what 8TB max in this unit (2x4TB raid0)?

                                            Just purchase a single 8TB drive.

                                            A single drive is not safer because if the drive goes you still lose all of the data on that drive.

                                            It is because in raid 0 any one of the drives die you lose all the data... 2 drive raid, twice as likely for a failure.

                                            Ah ya fair enough. I was just thinking you still only need to lose one either way. It's been a long day.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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