Drive Arrays and Fault Tolerance

RAID ADG—Advanced Data Guarding

NOTE: Not all controllers support RAID ADG.

RAID ADG is similar to RAID 5, because both methods generate and store parity information to protect against data loss caused by drive failure. With RAID ADG, however, two different sets of parity data are used, allowing data to still be preserved if two drives fail. Each set of parity data uses up a capacity equivalent to that of one of the constituent drives, as shown in Figure D-8.

B1

B2

P1,2

Q1,2

B3

P3,4

Q3,4

B4

P5,6

Q5,6

B5

B6

Q7,8

B7

B8

P7,8

Figure D-8: Advanced data guarding (RAID ADG)

This method is most useful when data loss is unacceptable, but cost is also an important factor. The probability that data loss will occur when arrays are configured with RAID ADG is less than when they are configured with RAID 5 (for details, refer to Appendix F).

Advantages

High read performance

High data availability—any two drives can fail without loss of critical data

More drive capacity usable than with RAID 1+0—parity information requires only the storage space equivalent to two physical drives

HP Smart Array 641/642 Controller User Guide

D-9