Understanding RAID Concepts and Terminology
The following concepts and terminology is commonly used when describing the functions of the RocketRAID 2220 Host Adapter.
Disk initialization
Initializing a disk writes necessary RAID configuration information to that disk. Disks must be initialized before configuring them into RAID arrays. The initialization process will destroy all data on the disk.
Disk Status
New | The disk contains no data and has not been initialized. |
Initialized | The disk has been initialized and can be used for array creation. |
Configured | The disk has been assigned to one or more arrays, or configured as a spare disk. |
Legacy | The disk was used on other controllers before use with the RocketRAID 2220 (see legacy |
| disk below). |
Array initialization
A redundant array (RAID5, RAID1, RAID10) needs to be initialized to ensure full performance and reliability.
When you create a redundant array using the RocketRAID 2220 controller’s BIOS Configuration Utility, it will create the array in
When creating an array using the HighPoint RAID Management Console software, you can specify an initialization option (Skip initialization, foreground and background).
Foreground initialization
Foreground initialization will
Background initialization
Background initialization allows the array to be used immediately. For RAID1 and RAID10 arrays, initialization will results in data being duplicated identically to the mirror pair. For RAID5 arrays, initialization will result in parity being generated from all array members.
Note: An
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