Came home from our Philly trip and booted up and was aghast when both of the two terabyte partitions on my drive were not there. Gone. Nata. No trace.
This brings me to my annual public service message about backups. If you don’t backup it’s only a matter of time until you can have the sick feeling. My article two years ago still applies. I still love Backblaze. Here is the link My Answer to "How To Back up a PC?". If getting real backup wasn’t one of your new year’s resolutions then add it, sign up for Backblaze, and check it off your list.
Now for the more geeky...
Alas this drive was not backed up and so the story turns to the fact that it is a Drobo. As many of you know I am in the business of creating video for businesses. Unfortunately, the bandwidth out of my office can’t keep up with the amount of data I create and the one thing that Backblaze won’t do is automatically exclude my FCPX render files (please?)
So, the Drobo is my video backup and project archive. Losing the drive is not the end of the world as all active client work is on my Mac and backup to the Drobo using “Carbon Copy Cloner” But none the less, disturbing.
But I didn’t lose anything! The Drobo had been secured for my trip and my first message when remounting the Drobo was “you have removed too many drives” with all of the drive lights flashing red. I hadn’t removed any, so I powered it down and reseated all the drives. Drobo went into recovery mode with the drive lights flashing green/yellow. This started about 6 PM and in a couple hours my first partition showed up and I had access to its files. That is the state where I left it running overnight.
In the morning, now about 13 hours into this mess, the second partition reappeared and I had access to all of my files. Drobo was still in recovery mode since all of the files were not yet redundantly secured. After about 18 hours, all the green lights returned to the Drobo, all files returned, all data secure.
That was the second time Drobo did its thing for me. I am a fan. (Except for the part that I have to unplug it to log into Lion)
Just for backup fanatics...
All of my business data along with my wife’s Mac is backed up on a Time Capsule. All client data is in Dropbox, which provides a 30 day backup of deleted files and allows me to not have to backup (or copy files) to my business notebook.
When on a shoot, client video is on SD cards and is not (yet) captured redundantly. But every used card is immediately write-protected and is backed up to my notebook while still on site, to my Drobo on return to the office, and to the production Mac immediately. The Drobo goes to a safe deposit box when I travel.
Still some holes in this process, but I am tightening them as time and budget permit.