At 09:58 you identified the error was in block A, but the XOR only identified the values in A and B didn't *match*. How did the mathematical method magically know the error was in block A and not in block B? Understand if the file's CRC is required in tandem with the XOR, but was just curious if there was a way the process worked without CRC...
great video and explanation! Question, you mentioned under control panel shared folders you need to go under advanced and select "enable data checksum for advanced data integrity". Unfortunately , I didn't select that on my shared folders. However, I have scrubbing setup successfully on my shared storage pool and it runs fine? So what is the difference between those options being checked or not checked?
Your simplistic, visual, explanation here earned a sub. Incredible job.
At 09:58 you identified the error was in block A, but the XOR only identified the values in A and B didn't *match*. How did the mathematical method magically know the error was in block A and not in block B? Understand if the file's CRC is required in tandem with the XOR, but was just curious if there was a way the process worked without CRC...
great video and explanation! Question, you mentioned under control panel shared folders you need to go under advanced and select "enable data checksum for advanced data integrity". Unfortunately , I didn't select that on my shared folders. However, I have scrubbing setup successfully on my shared storage pool and it runs fine? So what is the difference between those options being checked or not checked?
Why set scrubbing to monthly and not quarterly? I've heard monthly may be too much wear on the drives, so set it to 3 months to reduce wear?
We'll have to get you a dry erase marker board, they're super fun and the markers smell better lol.
Nice explanation. keep up the good work 💯👍
Great video. Even I understood the function, and I don’t have Synology. This is so helpful for Synology users. Recommend watching it.
Interested. I don't have "Advanced," only Advanced Permissions.