RAID 60 characteristics:
Groups n*s disks as one large virtual disk with a capacity of s*(n-2) disks, where s is the number of
spans and n is the number of disks within each span.
Redundant information (parity) is alternately stored on all disks of each RAID 6 span.
Better read performance, but slower write performance.
Increased redundancy provides greater data protection than a RAID 50.
Requires proportionally as much parity information as RAID 6.
Two disks per span are required for parity. RAID 60 is more expensive in terms of disk space.
RAID Level 10 (Striped-Mirrors)
The RAB considers RAID level 10 to be an implementation of RAID level 1. RAID 10 combines mirrored
physical disks (RAID 1) with data striping (RAID 0). With RAID 10, data is striped across multiple physical
disks. The striped disk group is then mirrored onto another set of physical disks. RAID 10 can be
considered a mirror of stripes.
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