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Yep, I have 6 14tb drives from them in raid10.
Three-way mirror?
I just keep adding 2 more drives as it gets full. Not sure if that's the best thing.
I would not trust these kind of dives in the mirror. IMHO RAID6 is the only way.
Due to risk of failure or risk of data corruption because the mirror can't tell which drive is right when there's a difference?
ZFS or BTRF mirror will know which side is at fault due to checksums. I'm more concern about simultaneous falures of two disks. Rebuilding of a RAID puts lots of pressure on remaining disks, so probability that remaining one dies too is much higher. with RAID6 3 disks need to die to lost date, which is less likely but not impossible.
The second one.
Mirroring is good for speed, but a storage mechanism with parity checks will always be more recoverable. And you will have far more storage available.
I think data checksums allow ZFS to tell which disk has the correct data when there's a mismatch in a mirror, eliminating the need for 3-way mirror to deal with bit flips and such. A traditional mirror like mdraid would need 3 disks to do this.
Or SnapRaid