Rosewill RSV-S8 user manual Raid Levels, Disk Striping Raid, Disk Mirroring Raid, Parity Raid Raid

Models: RSV-S8

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2.3 RAID LEVELS

Server RSV-S8

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2.3 RAID LEVELS

2.3.1 DISK STRIPING (RAID 0)

Striping is a performance-oriented, non-redundant data mapping technique. While Striping is discussed as a RAID Group type, it is does not provide any fault tolerance. With modern SATA and ATA bus mastering technology, multiple I/O operations can be performed in parallel, enhancing data throughput. Striping arrays use multiple disks to form a larger virtual disk. The figure below illustrates a three-disk stripe set. Stripe one is written to disk one, stripe two to disk two, and so forth. RAID 0 sets can be comprised of two, three, or four drives. If the sizes of the disk segments are different, the smallest disk segment will limit the overall size of the RAID Group.

2.3.2 DISK MIRRORING (RAID 1)

Disk mirroring creates an identical twin for a selected disk by having the data simultaneously written to two disks. This redundancy provides instantaneous protection from a single disk failure. If a read failure occurs on one drive, the system reads the data from the other drive. RAID 1 sets are comprised of two drives, and a third drive can be allocated as a spare in case one of the drives in the set fails. If the sizes of the disk segments are different, the smallest disk segment will limit the overall size of the RAID Group.

2.3.3 DISK MIRRORING AND STRIPING (RAID 10)

RAID 10 combines the features of both RAID 0 and RAID 1. Performance is provided through the use of Striping (RAID 0), while adding the fault tolerance of Mirroring (RAID 1). The implementation of RAID 10 requires four drives. The drives are assigned as two sets of striped pairs.

The data is written to RAID Group A, which is mirrored (RAID 1) and provides data redundancy. Alternating blocks of data are then striped across another RAID 1 mirrored set, shown as Set B in the figure above. This provides improved speed.

Under certain circumstances, a RAID 10 set can sustain multiple simultaneous drive failures.

2.3.4 PARITY RAID (RAID 5)

Parity or RAID 5 adds fault tolerance to Disk Striping by including parity information with the data. Parity RAID dedicates the equivalent of one disk for storing parity stripes. The data and parity information is arranged on the disk array so that parity is written to different disks. There are at least 3 members to a Parity RAID set. The following example illustrates how the parity is rotated from disk to disk. The following example illustrates how the parity is rotated from disk to disk.

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Rosewill RSV-S8 Raid Levels, Disk Striping Raid, Disk Mirroring Raid, Disk Mirroring And Striping Raid, Parity Raid Raid