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I would like to store data encrypted and reliable (no bit rot, mirror). Already did some testing but I am not sure at some points.

For all cases: I set up a windows storage space with 2 drives (mirror setup). And now ...

case 1 format drive with ReFS, activate bitlocker, create file-volume-truecrypt, format that with ReFS -> poor performance, not acceptable

case 2 format drive with ReFS, activate bitlocker, create file-volume-truecrypt, format that with NTFS -> poor performance, not acceptable

case 3 format drive with NTFS, activate bitlocker, create file-volume-truecrypt, format that with ReFS -> good performance, reliability? (*)

case 4 format drive with truecrypt (full disk encryption), format it with ReFS -> good performance, reliability?, no bitlocker possible (**)

(*) question: in this setup will the storage space detect and repair bit rots? Or to put it in other words: Does the "inner" ReFS has any advantage at all if the outer environment is NTFS?

(**) question: does the TC-layer prevent the storage-space+ReFS feature of repairing bitrots? This would be very interesting to get information on.

This may looks very paranoid but I would like to have bitlocker+truecrypt just in case. If (*) defeats bit rotting I just found my ideal solution since performance is good. If not I would rather use (**), again, if it would defeat bit rotting. Case 1+2 without bitlocker leads to same performance. It's just an performance issue if I have a single huge container in an ReFS environment.

Thanks for any help and external links.

wwhite
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  • Storage Spaces is RAID, there are several options, none of them will repair bit rot but one will make it irrelevant due to parity and mirroring – Ramhound May 10 '16 at 15:36
  • Thanks, but I think your statement is only true in combination with NTFS. "To combat bit rot, ReFS (again, when combined with Storage Spaces) uses its "scrubbing" feature to read all copies of a file in the array and compare their metadata with one another. If a corrupted file is found anywhere in the array, it is replaced by a good copy" [link](http://www.anandtech.com/show/5433/microsofts-refs-filesystem-for-windows-8-server-explained) – wwhite May 10 '16 at 15:44
  • Storage Spaces is still software-ish RAID feature. What file system you use won't change the features of Storage Spaces – Ramhound May 10 '16 at 15:47
  • Yes, but afaik using storage spaces changes the features of ReFS. Still, those two questions ( * ) and ( ** ) are, what I am concerned about. – wwhite May 10 '16 at 15:57

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