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RAID recovery performance
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Recovering a huge RAID volume requires that you do some prior
planning and set up. You do not want the system to run out of memory and start
swapping, as the recovery will grind to a halt. So to recover some
really big array, you need to
- add a /3GB switch in your boot.ini file
- have at least 3GB (preferably 4GB) physical memory installed.
- make sure you have some place to offload that data
Under these conditions, ZAR will recover an array containing about
12,000,000 objects (files and directories combined). This number is a
full-stop limit - if the volume contains more than 12M objects, ZAR will
eventually run out of memory. On the other hand, a typical NTFS volume,
something you most likely have at home, contains 500,000 files or less. For this typical
setup, 512MB of a physical memory is enough with low cache size, and 1GB
is enough if you have the cache size at maximum. Most of the reasonably
modern systems will thus perform quite well on a typical volume. In
these cases, no
additional tweaks are necessary. |
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ZAR also stands for Ze Art of Rescue.
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Weekend discount in effect 15 hours 22 min left
I am not tech savy at all...
which is how I somehow reformatted the disc in my digital camera on the last day of vacation,
and lost all my photos and videos.
I came across this download and gave it a try.
[...] I did have to refer back to the demo for guidance on selecting the right "physical device".
The selections it gave me were unrecognizable to me.
The demo helped me understand what I was looking for.
All pictures are recovered, and I am grateful!
The movies were recovered as pictures (large jpeg files).
I can't figure out how to convert them back to movies.
Regardless, I am thrilled to have my pictures back.
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