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You need to run frequent scrubs on the whole zfs array as well.

On unraid/snapraid you need to spin 2 drives up (one of then is always the parity)

On zfs, you are always spinnin up multiple drives too. Sure the "parity" isn't always the same drives or at least it's up to zfs to figure that out.

Nonetheless, this is all not really likely to have a significant impact. Spinning disks failure rates don't exactly correlate with their utilization[1][2]. Between SSD cache, ZFS scrubs, general usage, I don't think the parity drives are necessarily more at risk. This is anectodal, but when I ran an unRAID box for few years myself, I only had 1 failure and it was a non-parity drive.

[1] Google study from 2007 for harddrive failure rates: https://static.googleusercontent.com/media/research.google.c...

[2] "Utilization" in the paper is defined as:

       The literature generally refers to utilization metrics by employing the term duty cycle which unfortunately has no consistent and precise definition, but can be roughly characterized as the fraction of time a drive is active out of the total powered-on time. What is widely reported in the literature is that higher duty cycles affect disk drives negatively


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