Skip to content

RAID Data Recovery Guide and Tips

Critical data is often stored on RAID systems because the configurations are considered to be fault tolerant. RAID systems can be configured to keep working when one drive fails allowing disks to be hot swapped while the system keeps running, but even this setup of an array of drives is not infallible. It can only offset the failure of a single drive and the chances of multiple drive failures occur more frequently than most people want to imagine.

It’s important to remember that RAID systems are susceptible to the same problems that plague single hard drives, as well as, more complex problems such as: lost server registry configurations, accidental RAID drive reconfigurations, RAID controller failures and multiple drive failures.

RAID systems are “fault tolerant” not “fault proof.”

Here are some “Don’ts” to avoid further data loss or damage of a RAID device and optimize the best conditions for data recovery:

Don’t Do-It-Yourself

The best chance for retrieving critical data is the first try—so sending the RAID to a professional data recovery provider will protect the original data. In the scenario, the less you do, the better.

Don’t Rebuild the RAID

This could overwrite the data set on the RAID controller, which tells it how to view the drive array, making it more difficult (or impossible) to find and restore lost files.

Don’t Remove the Drives

Preserving the original order of the RAID array reduces the chance of overwriting critical data by mistake. If you must remove the drives, carefully label their sequence before doing so.

Don’t Run Repair Utilities

Utilities can change the original data, destroying opportunities to retrieve it with another recovery technique.

Don’t Reinitialize or Format

The process could overwrite the catalog and data pointers, effectively erasing the critical data.

Don’t Restore from Backups

If the backup doesn’t hold the data you think it holds, you run the risk of overwriting the RAID array with the wrong data.

If you need data recover on your failed RAID device, call DriveSavers 800.440.1904!

Mike Cobb, Direktør for ingeniørarbeid og CISO
Som direktør for ingeniøravdelingen leder Mike Cobb den daglige driften, inkludert fysisk og logisk gjenoppretting av roterende medier, SSD-er, smarte enheter og flashmedier. Han har også ansvar for forsknings- og utviklingsarbeidet knyttet til tidligere, nåværende og fremtidige lagringsteknologier. Mike fremmer vekst og sikrer at hver avdeling og deres ingeniører kontinuerlig utvikler sin kompetanse. Hver DriveSavers-ingeniør er opplært til å sørge for at vellykket og fullstendig datagjenoppretting er deres høyeste prioritet.

Som Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) har Mike ansvaret for cybersikkerheten hos DriveSavers. Dette inkluderer vedlikehold og oppdatering av sikkerhetssertifiseringer som SOC 2 Type II-samsvar, koordinering av selskapets sikkerhetspolicy og opplæring av ansatte i cybersikkerhet.

Mike begynte hos DriveSavers i 1994 og har en bachelorgrad i informatikk fra University of California, Riverside.

Back To Top
Search