JBOD: Just a Bunch of Disks
JBOD (Just a Bunch of Disks) groups multiple drives into a single volume with no redundancy. SOS Data Recovery recovers your JBOD data with a free 3-hour diagnosis.
How does JBOD work?
JBOD, or Just a Bunch of Disks, is a storage configuration that differs significantly from RAID systems in terms of operation and data security. Unlike RAID configurations that involve redundancy and parity levels for fault tolerance, JBOD provides no data protection measures.
In JBOD, data is simply written sequentially to each hard disk, one after another, until the first disk is full. Then, the second disk is used to store the remaining data, and so on until all available disks are used. This means that each disk is used independently, without data distribution or calculated parity.
However, this approach has a major drawback: the loss of a single hard disk results in the total loss of the data stored on it. Unlike RAID configurations that allow data recovery through redundancy or parity, JBOD has no protection in the event of a hard disk failure. If a hard disk in JBOD fails, all the data it contained is irretrievably lost.
Despite this lack of data security, some people consider JBOD to be safer than RAID 0. This is because with JBOD, data is spread across multiple hard disks, which slightly reduces the risk of total data loss compared to a single hard disk used in RAID 0. However, it is important to note that JBOD provides no data redundancy or protection and is therefore less reliable than RAID configurations that offer levels of fault tolerance.
In conclusion, JBOD is a simple and cost-effective storage configuration, but it provides no data security. Any hard disk failure results in the total loss of the data stored on it. Although some consider JBOD to be slightly safer than RAID 0 due to data distribution across multiple disks, it is important to consider the risks and choose an appropriate storage configuration based on security and fault tolerance needs.
SOS Data Recovery, a Swiss laboratory based in Ins, has been recovering data from all RAID systems since 2006. Over 11,300 media processed for more than 8,000 clients. Free diagnosis within 3 hours. CyberSafe certified.
What are the common failures of JBOD?
Do you recognise one of these situations? Contact us for a free diagnosis.
Mechanical failure of a drive
In a JBOD, the failure of one drive only causes the loss of data stored on that drive. Data on the other drives remains accessible.
Loss of concatenation order
In spanning mode (concatenation), data spans multiple drives. Losing the concatenation order makes it impossible to reconstruct files distributed across drives.
Failed controller or enclosure
The JBOD enclosure controller fails, making otherwise functional drives inaccessible. Common on cheap NAS or DAS enclosures.
SMART errors and bad sectors
SMART errors signal degradation of one or more JBOD drives. Without redundancy, each failing drive leads to potential data loss.
Accidental deletion or formatting
Formatting a JBOD partition erases data with no parity reconstruction possible. Recovery relies on file system analysis.
Ransomware and software corruption
Ransomware can encrypt data on one or more JBOD drives. Each drive must be analysed individually to identify recoverable data.