If apple airport extreme limits me to 2TB - can i mount multiple drives, max being 2TB each?
Q&A About Time Machine, Time Capsule, and Drobo
Q: Can I use Drobo as a backup target for Time Machine?
A: Yes. The two are a perfect combination. Time Machine requires an external drive such as Drobo to work. Drobo protects you from hard drive failure; Time Machine protects you from accidentally changing or deleting files.
Q: How can I use Time Machine and Drobo to do network backups?
A: Time Machine can do network backups to another Mac. The new Finder in OS X 10.5 makes sharing drives easy. Plug Drobo into a Mac on the network and setup your system preferences to share the Drobo. Set Time Machine’s Preferences on Macs in the network to use the Drobo on the Mac acting as a network resource.
Q: Can I connect Drobo to a Time Capsule or Airport Extreme Base Station and have it work with Time Machine?
A: Yes, just make sure you have updated Time Capsule or Airport Extreme to firmware 7.3.1 or later.
Q: Can I use DroboShare + Drobo as a backup target for Time Machine?
A: No. At this time Time Machine does not support network backup to devices using the cross-platform SMB network storage protocol that DroboShare utilizes.
Q: Why do I read blogs or forum posts about using Time Machine and SMB NAS devices?
A: Advanced users in the Apple community have found ways to trick Time Machine into working with SMB storage. However Apple does not support this functionality. We have heard from knowledgeable developers that data corruption can occur if the size of the backup exceeds 2TB or if a large number of files, on the order of a million, are backed up. Because the exact conditions leading to data corruption are not well quantified DRI recommends not experimenting with this unsupported capability.
Q: Why would I use Drobo with Apple’s Time Capsule or Airport Extreme?
A: Drobo compliments Time Capsule and provides three additional benefits:
- Capacity: Time Capsule and Airport Extreme are limited to 1 TB maximum capacity. With Drobo, you can get 2 TB for use by Time Machine, twice as big as the alternatives.
- Expandability: you can add capacity to Drobo by adding drives, or replacing smaller drives with larger ones.
- Redundancy: : Drobo uses multiple drives which protects your data against a single drive failure. Time Capsule is a single drive system.
|
| Time Capsule | Airport Extreme | Drobo and Time Capsule or Airport Extreme | Drobo connected to a Mac |
| Time Machine maximum data size | 1 TB | Depends on size of external drive up to 2 TB maximum | 2 TB | 16 TB |
| Protection from hard drive failure | No | Yes – if Drobo connected | Yes | Yes |
| Expandable | No | Yes – if Drobo connected | Yes | Yes |
Q: Why is capacity limited to 2 TB if I use Drobo with Time Capsule or Airport Extreme?
A: This is a restriction in Apple’s Time Capsule and Airport Express products. If you need more capacity, then you can connect Drobo directly to a Mac.
Q: What is the largest capacity Drobo I can create today?
A: At the time of this writing, March 2008, 1 TB drives are the largest available on the market. Plugging four of these into Drobo results in 3 TB of protected space available for Time Machine. As larger disk drives become available you can increase Drobo’s capacity by replacing its drives with larger ones. Drobo can support a single volume of up to 16TB.
Q: Is there a difference in how Time Machine works when Drobo is connected directly to a Mac versus connected directly to a Mac that is shared over a network?
A: If Drobo is plugged directly into a Mac then Time Machine makes a copy of the files that it backs up. Using Finder you can directly browse them. If Time Machine makes backups over a network to a Drobo connected to a Time Capsule, Airport Extreme, or another Mac, then the backups are created as a “sparse bundle” that must first be mounted before it can be browsed (first select the bundle and do an Apple-O key combination you will then see a disk icon appear on your desktop, you can then select that icon and browse it with Finder).
Q: How do I format Drobo for use with Time Capsule or Airport Express?
A: You can use the Drobo Dashboard to do the formatting -- its default settings work with Time Capsule and Airport Express. These defaults are: single partition, 2 TB volume with an HFS+ journaled file system. If you want to configure it manually, then use OS X’s DiskUtility and make sure the volume is 2 TB or smaller, and you select an HFS+ journaled file system.
Q: I though Airport Extreme didn’t work with journaled file systems.
A: With firmware 7.3.1 the Airport Extreme works with journaled file systems. When it first shipped, in 2/2007, non-journaled file systems were required for disks greater than 1 TB in size.
Q: How can I limit how much space Time Machine uses on my Drobo?
A: To limit how much space Time Machine uses you will need to create a partition on Drobo for use by Time Machine. You will need to use OS X’s DiskUtility in order to do this. Note that you can not create a partition on a Drobo that has data on it without OS X erasing all that data
Q: What does Time Machine do as Drobo gets full?
A: If Time Machine is not running in a dedicated partition, then it will grow to consume all of the available capacity in Drobo. As Drobo gets full it will enter “yellow mode” and it will prompt you to add storage. When this happens, the data bay indicator next to the smallest capacity drive will turn yellow on Drobo, Drobo Dashboard will turn yellow and you will receive an email alert if you are using that feature. If you do nothing and Time Machine keeps adding data then at 95% full Drobo will enter “red mode”. When this occurs, the data bay indicator next to the smallest capacity drive will turn red on Drobo, Drobo Dashboard will turn red and you will receive an email alert if you are using that feature. In red mode, Drobo will start to slow down as yet another reminder to you that it’s low on space.
Q: What is the worst thing that can happen if I run Time Machine and Drobo gets full?
A: All data that has been backed up on Drobo is safe. If you ignore Drobo’s warnings and just let Time Machine write to Drobo, the worst thing that will happen is that Time Machine will get slower and slower.
Q: Can I use Drobo Dashboard if Drobo is connected to a Time Capsule or Airport Extreme?
A: No. Drobo Dashboard communicates with Drobo over its USB connection. When Drobo is plugged into Time Capsule or Airport Extreme there is no way to communicate to its USB port. In this case, look at Drobo’s data bay indicator lights to check its status.
Q: I started using Time Machine on a non-Drobo drive and it’s out of space. What can I do?
A: Drobo and SuperDuper! (a 3rd party backup program) will help you out. Using SuperDuper! you can make an exact clone of that smaller drive that has your Time Machine data onto Drobo. This will give you more room for your Time Machine backups. Be aware that using the free version of SuperDuper! will erase the data on your Drobo before making a clone of your small drive. If this isn’t what you want, then you better buy the registered version. Using either its “Copy newer” or “Copy different” options will copy to your Drobo without erasing it.
The DRI Team shares about Drobo and data storage, plus exciting news and happenings at Data Robotics, Inc.
Is there any chance that the Droboshare will be able to utilise a afp share instead(as well as) of the smb currently used in the future.
afp is a considerably better protocol for the droboshare to use for Mac's. Apart from the benefits of being able to TM for backup, there is
- 2-3 times faster than SMB/CIFS
- large file support, no 4 GB limit
- auto reconnect support,
- client sleep support
I realise this would probably be a firmware upgrade but would be infinitely preferable to having to set up a server to re-share the drobo to get these benefits.
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