Hello,

I am going to upgrade my server, taking advantage of the fact that I am going to be able to put more hard disks, I wanted to take advantage of this to give a little more security (against loss) to my data.

Currently I have 2 hard drives in ext4 with information, and wanted to buy a third (same capacity all three) and place them in raid5, so that in the future, I can put more hard drives and increase the capacity.

Due to economic issues, right now I can only buy what would be the third disk, so it is impossible for me to back up the data I currently have.

The data itself is not valuable, in case any file gets corrupted, I could download it again, however there are enough teras (20) to make downloading everything a madness.

In principle I thought to put on this server (PC) a dietpi, a trimmed debian and maybe with mdadm make the raid. I have seen tutorials on how to do it (this for example https://ruan.dev/blog/2022/06/29/create-a-raid5-array-with-mdadm-on-linux ).

The question is, is there any way without having to format the hard drives with data?

Thank you and sorry for any mistakes I may make, English is not my mother language.

EDIT:

Thanks for yours answers!! I have several paths to investigate.

  • @[email protected]
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    1016 days ago

    You can do RAID 5 with three disks. It’s fine. Not ideal, but fine.

    My biggest concern is what OP is using as a server. If these disks are attached via USB, they are not going to have reliable connections, and it’s going to trigger frequent RAID rescans and resyncs any time one of the three disks drops out. And the extra load from that might cause even more drops.

    • @[email protected]
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      416 days ago

      I reread this a few times after seeing your comment, but still missing where USB was mentioned. Am I blind?

      • @[email protected]
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        216 days ago

        They didn’t say USB, but they did say dietpi. I’ve never played with a rpi, but I don’t think they have SATA or SAS ports, only USB.

        • @[email protected]
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          216 days ago

          Ah, he said PC, so I just assumed he wanted the distribution on x86. I see where you’re coming from though.

          • LoboAureoOP
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            116 days ago

            Yes, dietpi is main for SBC, but also has an iso for PCs, its and old computer with 6 sata ports