Intel Rapid Recover Technology

Intel Rapid Storage Technology supports the following Recovery features.

Mirror update policies

With Recovery, you can determine how often the mirror HDD is updated: continuously or on-request. When using the continuous update policy, data on the primary drive is simultaneously copied to the mirror drive as long as both drives are connected to the system. If you undock the computer while using the docking station's recovery drive, all new or revised data on the primary HDD is automatically copied to the recovery HDD when the notebook is redocked. This policy also allows for an unfinished mirroring operation to be completed if it was interrupted when you undocked the notebook.

When using the update on-request policy, data on the primary HDD is copied to the mirror HDD only when you request it by selecting Update Recovery Volume in Recovery. After the request, only the new or updated files on the primary drive are copied to the mirror HDD. Prior to updating the mirror HDD, the on-request policy allows a file to be recovered if the corresponding file on the primary HDD is corrupted. The on-request policy can also protect data on the mirror HDD if the primary HDD is attacked by a virus, provided you do not update the mirror HDD after the virus attack.

NOTE: You can change the mirror update policy at any time by right-clicking Modify Volume Update Policy.

Automatic HDD switching and rapid recovery

If the primary HDD fails, Recovery automatically switches to the mirrored drive without user intervention. Recovery displays a message to notify you of the primary HDD failure. In the meantime, the computer can boot from the mirrored HDD. When a new primary HDD is installed and the computer is booted, Recovery’s rapid recovery feature copies all mirrored data to the primary HDD.

NOTE: If using the update on request policy and the primary HDD fails or a file on the primary HDD becomes corrupted, all unmirrored data is lost.

Simplified migration from RAID to non-RAID

Users can migrate from a RAID 1 or Recovery volume to two non-RAID HDDs, called “breaking the array,” by following the instructions in Resetting RAID drives to non-RAID on page 37.

Migration from RAID 1 to Recovery is also supported. However, migration from RAID 0 to RAID 1 or from RAID 0 to a non-RAID primary HDD is not supported.

Intel Rapid Recover Technology 11