Ok straight up Cain. The guys are right on the OS. No need!
Hopefully you have data on another drive.
The main thing is rate the damage if lost, how much you can afford to lose and the cost to meet you need and go from there.
As far as the RAID level, theres only 3 types of RAIDs, forget the others: RAID 0, 1 and 5. For you redundancy, RAID 0 is out! So that leaves you with RAID 1(Mirroring) or RAID 5. I recommend you use RAID 1.
Also keep in mind, RAID is only good for a single drive failure not catastrophic events, i.e. fire.
You really need to implement a full disaster recovery plan to include maintaining off site backup storage. Figure up what backup media (tape, DVD, external drives, etc) method is economically in your funds and implement. I recommend full weekly backups of data and incremental daily backups. You may want to also include a monthly or quarterly imaging of your server. This is optional but could be handy.
Hopefully you have data on another drive.
The main thing is rate the damage if lost, how much you can afford to lose and the cost to meet you need and go from there.
As far as the RAID level, theres only 3 types of RAIDs, forget the others: RAID 0, 1 and 5. For you redundancy, RAID 0 is out! So that leaves you with RAID 1(Mirroring) or RAID 5. I recommend you use RAID 1.
Also keep in mind, RAID is only good for a single drive failure not catastrophic events, i.e. fire.
You really need to implement a full disaster recovery plan to include maintaining off site backup storage. Figure up what backup media (tape, DVD, external drives, etc) method is economically in your funds and implement. I recommend full weekly backups of data and incremental daily backups. You may want to also include a monthly or quarterly imaging of your server. This is optional but could be handy.
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