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My system support RIAD and SATA drive 3.0 GB , but i jast have one Western Digital HDD , Could you please let me know that , do i need use raid ? if so , which option ?

2006-07-08 22:50:46 · 2 answers · asked by parviz_ahmadi 2 in Computers & Internet Hardware Other - Hardware

2 answers

the most common is 0 or 1 or 0+1

that is to say a mirror raid a striped raid and a mirror striped raid,

okay on one of them the contents of a hard drive are duplicated on another drive. that would be mirror

striped the information is segmented across two drives,

and the finalof the most common is striped mirror, the informatin is segmented across two drives and mirrored on another two drives

Def. from webopedia as follows

RAID - (rād) Short for Redundant Array of Independent (or Inexpensive) Disks, a category of disk drives that employ two or more drives in combination for fault tolerance and performance. RAID disk drives are used frequently on servers but aren't generally necessary for personal computers.
There are number of different RAID levels:

Level 0 -- Striped Disk Array without Fault Tolerance: Provides data striping (spreading out blocks of each file across multiple disk drives) but no redundancy. This improves performance but does not deliver fault tolerance. If one drive fails then all data in the array is lost.
Level 1 -- Mirroring and Duplexing: Provides disk mirroring. Level 1 provides twice the read transaction rate of single disks and the same write transaction rate as single disks.
Level 2 -- Error-Correcting Coding: Not a typical implementation and rarely used, Level 2 stripes data at the bit level rather than the block level.
Level 3 -- Bit-Interleaved Parity: Provides byte-level striping with a dedicated parity disk. Level 3, which cannot service simultaneous multiple requests, also is rarely used.
Level 4 -- Dedicated Parity Drive: A commonly used implementation of RAID, Level 4 provides block-level striping (like Level 0) with a parity disk. If a data disk fails, the parity data is used to create a replacement disk. A disadvantage to Level 4 is that the parity disk can create write bottlenecks.
Level 5 -- Block Interleaved Distributed Parity: Provides data striping at the byte level and also stripe error correction information. This results in excellent performance and good fault tolerance. Level 5 is one of the most popular implementations of RAID.
Level 6 -- Independent Data Disks with Double Parity: Provides block-level striping with parity data distributed across all disks.
Level 0+1 – A Mirror of Stripes: Not one of the original RAID levels, two RAID 0 stripes are created, and a RAID 1 mirror is created over them. Used for both replicating and sharing data among disks.
Level 10 – A Stripe of Mirrors: Not one of the original RAID levels, multiple RAID 1 mirrors are created, and a RAID 0 stripe is created over these.
Level 7: A trademark of Storage Computer Corporation that adds caching to Levels 3 or 4.
RAID S: EMC Corporation's proprietary striped parity RAID system used in its Symmetrix storage systems.

2006-07-08 23:04:23 · answer #1 · answered by mhp_wizo_93_418 7 · 0 0

raid gives you protection in case a disk fails
you do need a minimum of 2 actual disks for raid 1 (mirroring) or 3 disks for raid 5 (striping with parity)

2006-07-08 22:54:54 · answer #2 · answered by Ivanhoe Fats 6 · 0 0

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