Gigabyte GA-K8VT800 user manual Serial ATA Bios Setting Utility Introduction, RAID Levels

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4-1-3 Serial ATA BIOS Setting Utility Introduction

RAID Levels

RAID (Redundant Array of Independent Disks) is a method of combining two hard disk drives into one logical unit. The advantage of an Array is to provide better performance or data fault tolerance. Fault tolerance is achieved through data redundant operation, where if one drives fails, a mirrored copy of the data can be found on another drive. This can prevent data loss if the operating system fails or hangs. The individual disk drives in an array are called members. The configuration information of each member is recorded in the reserved sector that identifies the drive as a member. All disk members in a formed disk array are recognized as a single physical drive to the operating system.

Hard disk drives can be combined together through a few different methods. The different methods are referred to as different RAID levels. Different RAID levels represent different performance levels, security levels and implementation costs. The RAID levels which the VIA VT8237R sourthbridge supports are RAID 0, RAID 1 and JBOD.

RAID 0 (Striping)

RAID 0 reads and writes sectors of data interleaved between multiple drives. If any disk member fails, it affects the entire array. The disk array data capacity is equal to the number of drive members times the capacity of the smallest member. The striping block size can be set from 4KB to 64KB. RAID 0 does not support fault tolerance.

RAID 1 (Mirroring)

RAID 1 writes duplicate data onto a pair of drives and reads both sets of data in parallel. If one of the mirrored drives suffers a mechanical failure or does not respond, the remaining drive will continue to function. Due to redundancy, the drive capacity of the array is the capacity of the smallest drive. Under a RAID 1 setup, an extra drive called the spare drive can be attached. Such a drive will be activated to replace a failed drive that is part of a mirrored array. Due to the fault tolerance, if any RAID 1 drive fails, data access will not be affected as long as there are other working drives in the array.

JBOD (Spanning)

A spanning disk array is equal to the sum of the all drives when the drives used are having different capacities. Spanning stores data onto a drive until it is full, then proceeds to store files onto the next drive in the array. When any disk member fails, the failure affects the entire array. JBOD is not really a RAID and does not support fault tolerance.

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Appendix

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Contents GA-K8VT800 Motherboard Product Manual Classification CopyrightTable of Contents Drivers Installation K8VT800-GA GA-K8VT800 Motherboard LayoutBlock Diagram Page Preparing Your Computer Considerations Prior to InstallationInstallation Notices Instances of Non-WarrantyCPU Feature SummaryBios Installation of the CPU Installation of the CPU and HeatsinkInstallation of the Heatsink Installation of MemoryDDR1 DDR2 DDR3 Installation of Expansion Cards I/O Back Panel Introduction Connectors Introduction ATX12V / ATX Power Connector Cpufan / Sysfan Cooler Fan Power Connector IDE1 / IDE2 IDE Connector FDD FDD ConnectorPwrled SATA0/ SATA1 Serial ATA ConnectorFpanel Front Panel Jumper Cdin CD In Connector Faudio Front Audio Panel ConnectorSurcen Surround Center Connector Spdifio Spdif In / Out Connector15 IR USB1 / FUSB2 Front USB ConnectorClrcmos Clear Cmos BatteryEnglish English Main Menu Status Page Setup Menu / Option Page Setup MenuMain Menu For example Bios Ver. E8 „ Save & Exit Setup „ Load Optimized Defaults„ Set Supervisor Password „ Set User PasswordIDE Channel 2/3 Master Standard Cmos FeaturesTime IDE Channel 0 Master/Slave IDE Channel 1 Master/SlaveBase Memory Drive A/Drive BHalt on MemoryPassword Check Advanced Bios FeaturesHard Disk Boot Priority First / Second / Third Boot DeviceRAID Integrated PeripheralsUSB Keyboard Support OnBoard LAN Boot ROMUart Mode Select USB 2.0 ControllerMidi Port Address UR2 Duplex ModeParallel Port Mode Onboard Parallel PortAcpi OS Power Management SetupResume by Alarm PME Event Wake UpModem Ring Resume INT PnP/PCI ConfigurationsCurrent CPU/SYSTEM FAN Speed RPM Current CPU TemperaturePC Health Status Current VoltageV Vcore / DDR25V / +3.3V / +12VFrequency/Voltage Control Load Fail-Safe Defaults Top PerformanceDimm OverVoltage control Set Supervisor/User Password Load Optimized DefaultsExit Without Saving Save & Exit SetupEnglish Install Chipset Drivers Drivers InstallationSoftware Information Software ApplicationContact Us Hardware InformationEnglish Unique Software Utilities Xpress Recovery IntroductionWhat is Xpress Recovery ? How to use the Xpress RecoveryF9 For Xpress Recovery Exit and Restart Remove Backup Image  Remove backup image. Are you sure? Y/NFlash Bios Method Introduction Method 1 Q-FlashTMUtilityBefore You Begin Task menu for Q-Flash utility Exploring the Q-FlashTM / Dual Bios utility screenTask menu for Dual Bios utility Entering the Q-FlashTMutilitySteps Using the Q-FlashTMutilityYou can repeat to Part Two FlashTMutility bar Exploring the Q-FlashTMutility screenCongratulation!! You have updated Bios successfully Methods and steps Method 2 @BIOSTM UtilityEnglish RAID Levels Serial ATA Bios Setting Utility IntroductionEntering the RAID Bios Setup Configuring the VIA VT8237 RAID BiosCreate RAID Array Create Array 111.79 Stripe0 SerialCh1 Master ST3120026AS Delete a RAID array Delete Array¡G Installing the RAID drivers 4 2- / 4- / 6- / 8- Channel Audio Function Introduction Stereo Speakers Connection and SettingsChannel Audio Setup English Surround-Kit connector Spdif cable connector English Spdif Output Device Optional Device Introduction of audio connectors Jack-Sensing and UAJ IntroductionAuto-detecting Manual setting Enable UAJ functionUAJ Introduction AMI Bios Beep Codes TroubleshootingEnglish Taiwan Headquarters Contact UsChina Shanghai