WHS 2011 Add-in: Drive Bender Updated to version 1.2.1.4

Drive Bender, the add-in for Windows Home Sever 2011 that replaces Drive Extender, has now been updated to version 1.2.1.4.

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What is it?

Drive Bender is state of the art, single point storage pool technology for Microsoft Windows. Drive Bender presents multiple hard drives as a single pool of data storage, either as one or more drive letters, or a network shared drive. Drive Bender is able to do this with any drive recognized by Windows, including external drive such as USB, Firewire etc.

Expandability

Drive Bender also provides the user with the ability to seamless expand their storage pool by simply adding a new drive. Adding a new drive expands the pool by the size of the new drive. Existing data within the pool is redistributed to the new drive to ensure the pool remain balanced.

Drive merging and converting

Drive Bender also offers a merge capability, allowing users to take a drive that contains data, and merge that drive (and data) into the pool. In addition there is also a drive conversion feature. This can take and existing drive letter (mounted against a physical drive) and convert this into a pooled drive. Once completed, new hard drives can be added to expand the once fixed drive.

Data redundancy

To further ensure data safety, Drive Bender can automatically duplicate any file added to a Drive Bender pool. File duplication is determined at the folder level and occurs on the fly as data is being written to the pool. More importantly, files are only duplicated across physical drives ensuring maximum safety and data redundancy.

Non-destructive

One of the key Drive Bender features is its non-destructive file system technology. In short, this means that all drives within a Drive Bender pool are utilizing standard NTFS format and file structures. This is to such an extent that a drive can be pulled from the pool and read on any machine capable of reading an NTFS formatted drive. More over, drives attached to the pool can be done so without modification, if a drive is added (not merged) that contains existing data, that data will remain untouched.

Ease to try

Because of our non-destructive file system, taking Drive Bender for a test drive is easy. Simply specify the drives to be included in the pool, and you are ready go. The drives are not formatted (unless specified), the only change made to the drive is the addition of a folder that holds the contents of the pool and a small number of configuration files.

The technology

Drive Bender employs existing, proven kernel mode file system technology. Having spent many years developing kernel mode drivers, we are able to use this experience to great extent. The end result is a product whose performance will closely match that of the underlying drive.

The story

Early in 2010 we prototyped a Drive Extender style application with the view of releasing a product that would work with all versions of Microsoft Windows. However soon thereafter, Microsoft announced Vail (a new version of Windows Home Server) and a small business server product, codename Aurora, both of which contain their Drive Extender technology. Given this, and the possibility that Drive Extend may well make its way to other Microsoft platforms, we shelved the project.

However later that same year, Microsoft announced that they would be dropping Drive Extender from all their products (including Windows Home Server 2011), leaving the door open for Division-M to resurrect the Drive Bender project!

Release v1.2.1.4 release (2011-10-26)

- Bug fix: Minor memory leak occurred when the WHS dashboard was open.

Learn more about Drive Bender here

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About Andrew Edney

This post was written by who has written 5935 posts for Connected Digital World. I am the owner and editor of this site. I have been interested in gadgets and tech since I was a little kid. I have also written a number of books on various tech subjects. I also write for The Huffington Post. And I am honoured to be a Microsoft MVP for Windows Home Server since January 2008.

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  • FWJJR

    I think this just about proves tha DB released WAY to Early, two updates in two days after release..?? What the? Do I feel comfortable using this code now?I think they have answered for me.!

  • EricE

    @FWJJR – You shouldn’t be surprised. Especially in the Windows world were there is practically an unlimited combination of hardware and software out there, software publishers are always going to run into issues until their code is widely deployed.

    No vendor can hope to test or even beta test every possible configuration.

    The bottom line? If you can’t tolerate change or are extremely risk adverse – wait for the second major release. From any vendor, not just these guys. But to criticize them for release at all is counter productive – if you want a vendor to wait unit their product is perfect you’ve just introduced a paradox and guaranteed that the product will never ship :p

    • FWJJR

      Eric- I understand your position that We/I should expect bugs/minor issues, Post release.. however my point here is that we are now on the third update/version since release… to fix bugs that affect function.Does this not sound like its still in beta? or should still be labeled beta?

      I also seem to not be the only one with issues… Others have reviewed and commented on DB’s own forums.

      I WANT a working product/ Pool Solution..
      I am an engineer, Change is definately in my vocabulary, however Said companies SHOULD deliver what they promiss, and this release is just shrink wrapped beta.