RAID Level 0 - Striping: Advantages
RAID Level 0 - Striping: Advantages
RAID Level 0 - Striping: Advantages
com/library/technology/raid
RAID is a technology that is used to increase the performance and/or reliability of data storage. The abbreviation
stands for Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks. A RAID system consists of two or more drives working in parallel.
These disks can be hard discs, but there is a trend to also use the technology for SSD (solid state drives). There are
different RAID levels, each optimized for a specific situation. These are not standardized by an industry group or
standardization committee. This explains why companies sometimes come up with their own unique numbers and
implementations. This article covers the following RAID levels:
The software to perform the RAID-functionality and control the drives can either be located on a separate controller
card (a hardware RAID controller) or it can simply be a driver. Some versions of Windows, such as Windows Server 2012
as well as Mac OS X, include software RAID functionality. Hardware RAID controllers cost more than pure software, but
they also offer better performance, especially with RAID 5 and 6.
RAID-systems can be used with a number of interfaces, including SCSI, IDE, SATA or FC (fiber channel.) There are
systems that use SATA disks internally, but that have a FireWire or SCSI-interface for the host system.
Sometimes disks in a storage system are defined as JBOD, which stands for ‘Just a Bunch Of Disks’. This means that
those disks do not use a specific RAID level and acts as stand-alone disks. This is often done for drives that contain
swap files or spooling data.
Advantages
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Disadvantages
Ideal use
RAID 0 is ideal for non-critical storage of data that have to be read/written at a high speed, such as on an image
retouching or video editing station.
If you want to use RAID 0 purely to combine the storage capacity of twee drives in a single volume, consider mounting
one drive in the folder path of the other drive. This is supported in Linux, OS X as well as Windows and has the
advantage that a single drive failure has no impact on the data of the second disk or SSD drive.
Advantages
Disadvantages
Ideal use
RAID-1 is ideal for mission critical storage, for instance for accounting systems. It is also suitable for small servers in
which only two data drives will be used.
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RAID 5 is the most common secure RAID level. It requires at least 3 drives but can work with up to 16. Data blocks are
striped across the drives and on one drive a parity checksum of all the block data is written. The parity data are not
written to a fixed drive, they are spread across all drives, as the drawing below shows. Using the parity data, the
computer can recalculate the data of one of the other data blocks, should those data no longer be available. That
means a RAID 5 array can withstand a single drive failure without losing data or access to data. Although RAID 5 can be
achieved in software, a hardware controller is recommended. Often extra cache memory is used on these controllers to
improve the write performance.
Advantages
Disadvantages
Ideal use
RAID 5 is a good all-round system that combines efficient storage with excellent security and decent performance. It is
ideal for file and application servers that have a limited number of data drives.
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Advantages
Disadvantages
Ideal use
RAID 6 is a good all-round system that combines efficient storage with excellent security and decent performance. It is
preferable over RAID 5 in file and application servers that use many large drives for data storage.
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Advantages
Disadvantages
104 Comments »
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Hi, I’m currently using a Raid 0 setup using 2 disks totalling 1TB on software raid 0. I would like to know if it is
possible somehow to install Windows 10 on Raid 0? If so, how would I proceed?
You would need to have your RAID disk driver in hand before you begin installing Windows 10 on the PC. When
prompted, you would then insert the disk with the driver on it. Most RAID manufacturers have an option to create
the driver disk.
I’m the idiot who backed up 4TB with a RAID 0 array…(had no clue my external HDD was even set up that way).
Anyway, I think the dual drives in the enclosure are fine but power suddenly just cut off. It won’t power on at all…
My question is this: Can I take out the platters and put them in a dual dock 3.5″ with RAID 0 support and expect them
to mount so I can move all my data (presuming it’s ok) to a new drive? Or is there a way to repair the power issue in
the enclosure?
I had a similar problem with a four-bay Areca enclosure configured for RAID 5. The power supply on it failed, so the
enclosure wouldn’t power up. I couldn’t wait the three weeks for the enclosure repair to regain access to the data,
so I got an Areca eight-bay enclosure and loaded the four drives in. It fired right up perfectly.
Daniel Smith 4 drives of 3 Tb in raid 10 is 6 TB because the you combine 2 drives as raid 0 and the other 2 are used a
mirror
Those who work with large amounts of data should choose between raid 10 or 6
In my view today raid 5 is no longer a good solution because of bitrot .. sadly raid 6 will not last much longer it will
loose in around 2019-2020 its value because of the everlasting growth in the sizes we use. However the most secure
is in my view raid 6 till the grow beyond the max of raid 6 is reached and it looses its ability to proper restore the
files.
Daniel gave the correct answer to the asked question: “I am trying to configure 4 drives of 3 TB each. If I use RAID
1, what is my effective capacity?” as a reply to Laurens incorrect answer. Laurens answer was, just like yours,
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4 drives of 3 TB in RAID 1+0 is 6 TB.
RAID 1 is simple mirroring, so your total capacity is HALF the capacity of all drives, not 1/4th.
RAID 1+0 is the same capacity; the difference is that data are striped across drives in addition to being mirrored..
Raid10 Am I right to be scared of mirroring ?- because I had a simple (simple domain controller server2003) 2 drive
Raid1 fail (lost its mirror) but no one knew since they continued to write to the drive(s)- when I found out I could not
tell which drive the data was on – it got mixed up across both drives and YES it too a LONG time to sort out
– file file by file! Is Raid10 failure along similar lines possible ?
You’ve worked with unsane RAID. Even a software raid should be telling you which drive is malfunctioning – at least
Linux will flood error log with messages of failed drive.
A properly designed RAID, soft or hard, should be able to indicate the malfunctioning HD – otherwise it’s lacking bad!
If you have 4 separate raid 5 arrays, would a hard drive failure in one of the arrays affect only the performance of
the one array and the others would remain unaffected?
I have no practical knowledge about this but assume it does have a certain impact as rebuilding the faulty RAID-set
is pretty IO and CPU-intensive.
Depends on connectivity.
“If 100 people all go to work at the same time, will it cause a traffic jam?”
As long as no link is over 75% utilized, then only the degraded array will suffer.
“If you want to use RAID 0 purely to combine the storage capacity of twee drives in a single volume, consider mounting
one drive in the folder path of the other drive. This is supported in Linux, OS X as well as Windows and has the
advantage that a single drive failure has no impact on the data of the second disk or SSD drive.”
Can anyone explain this?… How can we mount, and how this makes advantage against drive failure?
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You’ve got a misunderstanding of how raid 0 works. You have a file that is broken into 10 chunks, and those chunks
must load into memory before you can use them. So on one dish, your hard drive controller loads block 1, then block
2, then block 3… etc. In raid 0, it would load block 1 and 2 at the same time, then block 3 and 4. This is
oversimplified, but that’s why you get faster performance in raid 0. But if you lose a disk, you only have half your
file. It’s lost unless you have a backup. What you are recommending will not increase speeds by much, unless you are
loading to files in separate folders. This doesn’t increase the speed that you access those individual files, just that
you can load those separatefiles at the same time. Raid 0 allows you to load a single file in about half the time
(processing overhead reduces it down from a flat “double the speed”, but it’s still much better than one drive.
Thanks for beautifully explaining the types of RAID. I am a tech guy and was using RAID 5. Somehow, I had lost the
data from it. So, I asked the solution from my colleague and he advised me to use Stellar Phoenix raid recovery
software. I had purchased this software from http://www.stellarinfo.com/windows-raid-recovery.php. This works
great for me. Thanks!
Stellar Phoenix is a scam company and this fake comment is just sock puppet marketing. Buyer Beware.
Great post! When backing up data I always use the 3-2-1 style strategy. 3 total copies, 2 local and 1 in the cloud. That’s
a great place to start! But, more is always better.
You opt for Dual mirror: so in that case, no need another drive for TM ? If TM, then the drive is also need 3TB ?
2. For NAS, as when I check if using NAS in Thunderbolt, so pricey and need around 4 to 6 bay HD, all these HD are
3.5”, so come out the NAS is very big and heavy
Laurens, my main purpose is like bigger HD with speed (like what I am currently using 1TB SSD), actually I have a ext
1TB SSD in Samsung, but I still prefer to have some external HD (or even SSD) to extend my storage, so in that case,
any product you can recommend, in Apple web, I see the offer ext drive like Promise Pegasus2, G-tech.
I’m no Time Machine user myself but according to a few web sites I checked it is not absolutely necessary to use a
separate partition for a Time Machine backup. You can put other data on that partition but it apparently more
common to use a separate partition. http://www.howtogeek.com/212445/how-to-use-a-time-machine-drive-
for-both-file-storage-and-backups/
The mirrored drives protect your data against 1 disk failing. Accidental errors like incorrectly deleting a file or
misplacing it or data corruption are more common and a bigger worry. That is why you use Time Machine for the
data residing on the internal drive but of course the same also applies to the data that will be stored on those
mirrored drives. So in my opinion, the ideal setup is that the third drive on which you put your Time Machine data
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easier to repurpose as a 3-disk RAID set if your storage needs change over time.
As for the best type of disk enclosure for Mac: I have no idea since I stopped using Macs a year ago and don’t read
up on them anymore.
I have iMac in 1 TB SSD, but almost use 60%, now thinking several ext HD to store those datas, If I let say use 4 x 1 TD
and in Raid 5, do I still need to do some disk partition to change 4 HD into 1 ? Also if I would like to use this ext for
Time machine, do I need to partition as well ? like the above 4 HD, do I need to spare 1 HD (in that case, 1TB) for TM,
but is it enough ? As have3 HD (3TB) for data ?
I would personally opt for dual mirrored 3TB drives instead of 4x 1 TB. It is simpler, offers better performance,
makes less noise and uses less power. When you add a third disk for Time Machine you can still do it all with a 4-disk
enclosure, instead of having to buy a more expensive 5-drive system. With 3 disks in use, you still hafe a spare slot if
you want to expand storage in the future. If you go for a NAS box its software takes care of making those mirrored
drives appear as one partition. Check out YouTube videos on setting up a Synology, Qnap,… system – it is pretty
straightforward.
One question.If we take RAID 5, what is pairity checksum features.If we have 4 disk and configured raid 5..It will do
stripping means fast data flow as data being distributed but what is pairity for ?
2. if data can be recovered of failed disk 1 then why not to all 3 disks.
3. why is it required to have RAID 6 for double pairity ?
The parity is used for recovering data in case of drive failure. With RAID5 one disk can crash and you’ll still be able
to recover all data thanks to the parity information. With RAID6 two disks can die simultaneously. More detailed
descriptions of the way parity works can be found elsewhere on the web. This page is meant to give a general
overview.
thanks for reply.i just wanted to know, parity is a program or algorithm and does it takes space in disk too? also in
raid 0 concept do we get to use both disk space for ex 1tb each we are using for raid 0.
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I have about 2TB of data and planning to swap a harddisk from the NAS (with previous week’s disk) weekly to store in
separate location as backup.
Having an extra offsite disk is a good idea. I wouldn’t do that using a NAS unless inserting and removing disks is
really easy. In many NAS enclosures it is a bit of a hassle to swap drives. Once something is clunky, you stop doing
it after a while. Why not use a separate harddisk docking station for the off-site copy?
I am looking to install an external multiple bay NAS drive for home use. Approximately 9-12 TB, keeping in mind
performance and that I will be backing up all data on an external HDD stored in my safe. What would be the best RAID
configuration to use?
Thank You for any insight and information.
What an excellent explanation of RAID….. its amazing, easy language and can any body understand.Thank you so
much
Hi, I have read your explanations about RAID configuration and it is very much informative with pictures. I have a
doubt that in RAID 5 or in RAID 6, how much space will al1ocate for a parity drive if it is a 1TB drive.
Another doubt I have that, even though it is not relating to this topic, what is mean by SATA3 6GB/s interface? Is it a
6GB/s transfer speed or any other? My HDD occupied with the same SATA3 interface and I have been getting not more
than 50MB/s while copied a file from one logical drive to another since the date of I assembled the PC.
If I understand your first question correctly, you are wondering if you can use a smaller drive for parity compared
to the other drives in the RAID set. The hardware or software RAID controller determines if you can mix different
sizes and types of drives. Many require all drives to have the same capacity. Alternatively they use the capacity of
the smallest drive across all of them. That means a mix of several 2 TB drives and a single 1 TB leads to all disks
only using 1 TB of storage capacity.
For SATA3, the 6 Gb/s indeed refers to the transfer speed. Please note that it is 6 gigabit per second, not 6
gigabyte per second. It is Gb/s, not GB/s. There is some overhead which means the fastest real transfer speed is
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If you are getting poor performance on a Sata 3 controller, it’s likely because your drive is only a Sata 2 drive. To
take advantage of Sata 3 speeds, you need both a Sata 3 drive and a Sata 3 controller.
Also as noted, the 6 gigabit-per-second transfer rate specified for Sata 3 is only what the controller is capable of.
A Sata 3 hard disk will never achieve a full 6Gb per second transfer rate, but it will be way faster than a Sata 2
drive. SSDs will get you much closer than any hard drive, but no storage media will actually ever reach the
maximum transfer rate of the controller. The type of data being transferred is a significant factor in this as well.
Also the 6Gb per second Sata 3 transfer rate only applies to sequential reads, which are faster than random reads,
particularly on rotating media. Write operations are much slower, as the media itself is the bottleneck.
-=Cameron
Hi,
Can you please tell me what is the maximum size for one virtual disk under RAID 1. (virtual disk size limit)
That depends on the RAID controller that you’ll be using. What is the largest disk size it supports?
I have a 160Gb and a 750gb drives If i RAID 0 with them will I get 910gb of space under one drive or will it be limit to
160gb being to lowest size of the two?
The storage space added to the array by each disk is limited to the size of the smallest one, which means this would
be very unefficient.
If your smallest drive is 160 GB, then a raid 0 configuration would give you twice that amount, or 320 GB. You can
certainly do this. If you really don’t need the extra space and you want the speed for gaming or doing things like
large photo editing or movie clip editing, and don’t want to spend the extra for a larger disk, then go for it I guess. I
would just get a second large disk though. HDDs are moving back to being cheap again. Set aside the smaller disk for
a backup drive and sync some important folders to it. Then you don’t have to worry as much about the raid 0 array
being less fault tolerant.
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Thank you. Its a well written explanation regarding the RAID function.
Excellent Doc
The other disadvantage is that you cannot go back in time and recover a file you accidentally deleted two days ago.
Previous Versions
i have 4*2tb hdd mounted in raid 0 need for performance i need to mirror or secure these data how to do ? RAID 0+1 ?
do you recommend ?
I personally have two external disk enclosures and alternate back-ups of all data on these enclosures. One of them is
stored at my parents house and during each visit I swap them out so I always have an off-site backup. There are two
disadvantages of just mirroring your data on additional internal disks: your backup is physically in the same location
so if the PC gets stolen or there is a fire everything is gone. The other disadvantage is that you cannot go back in
time and recover a file you accidentally deleted two days ago.
In addition, I don’t understand using Raid 1 and “a hardware controller.” Please explain.
And…”cannot be replaced while server is running?
thanks..
In the past RAID systems were typically used in servers, not with stand-alone PCs or Macs. That is no longer true so
I’ve updated the text. If you attach a separate box containing two or more drives to a computer and those drives
are running in a RAID configuration, there is a circuit board in that box that handles the distribution of the data
across the drives. That board has its own CPU: it is effectively a mini computer but it typically is called a hardware
controller.
Hello, I have 4TB of photo images on a glyph drive that is just short of 20% full. (each image between 300 and 500mg.)
Most of it is in an alternate location (3tb) and that is also spent so another external drive without a backup is being
used.
I am wondering if a mirrored 12 or 16 gb raid 1 drive is a good idea (my current 4tb can be moved to the other locale
giving me 7tb. Or if that’s just too big and if one drive fails due to corruption they both fail as they’re mirrored.
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If I understand it correctly you currently have around 6 TB of data and you expect to add at least 1 TB each year. A
mirrored 16 TB RAID 1 system gives you 8 TB of effective capacity, which means you’ll run out of space again pretty
soon. Assuming you go for a 4×4 TB disk setup, it would make more sense to choose RAID 5 since that gives you 12 GB
of effective space. I am not familiar with the brands you mention. Have a look at Drobo as well – their RAID boxes
seem to be pretty popular but there are dozens of alternatives on the market.
So, if one had two 500gb HDs and a 1tb WD My book along with a 2th My passport ultra, what would be the most
essential and productive RAID setup to go with?
So, if I’m setting up a server running Windows Server 2011 (for home use), which will be installed on a 500gb seagate
IDE HD and there will be a spare 500gb WD HD plus a 2tb WD My passport ultra and 1tb My book, how in the hell
would you setup the RAID software for that and what would be the best setup for a home server? I’m familiar with
networking, I’ve just never bothered with RAID.
I would stay away from RAID with such a setup. RAID works best for drives with the same capacity and using the
same (type of) controller. If you want higher throughput remove the big drives from their external enclosure and
put them internally on SATA 6. That is faster than most USB3 controllers. You could mirror both 500 GB drives if
redundancy is what you are after but I’d rather have redundancy on my data than on my software.
Is it possible you can explain to me how to do the following or direct me to a tutorial? I have a 4 drive NAS system that
uses EXFAT (FAT64) and was considering RAID 1+0 but really didn’t want to lose all that storage. On the other hand, I
have lost many hard drives and all the information from crashes. So I’ve learned it’s not IF your drive crashes but
WHEN. I’d love to use the full capacity of the drives while still being able to recover from a crash.
“If you want to use RAID 0 purely to combine the storage capacity of twee drives in a single volume, consider mounting
one drive in the folder path of the other drive. This is supported in Linux, OS X as well as Windows and has the
advantage that a single drive failure has no impact on the data of the second disk or SSD drive.”
You don’t get any redundancy with mounting drives into the file system. If that is your goal, you’ll need to stick to
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I cannot give you a short and relevant description of how to do this, especially not without any knowledge of your
setup. The way RAID needs to be configured in a NAS or SAN system is completely different from doing so on a PC
or Mac. If you are a PC user, you typically need to go to the BIOS before the system has the chance to boot and in
the BIOS you can then configure which disks should be part of the RAID system. Once that is done, the RAID volume
can be partionned and formatted from within the operating system.
sir please explain me, which RAID is most important in all the RAID category?
That depends on your definition of important. For home usage, RAID 0 is interesting if you are after speed or RAID 1
if you want security. For company servers, RAID 6 is probably the way to go right now.
Is it correct?
The way you have explained using simple terms I really liked it. But what I feel is you should have included RAID 6 as it
can withstand failure of more than one disk. Its interesting to learn something that is quite different from that of
others.
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if you were to set up raid 0 on SSD’s would that increase speed any?
There are lots of heated discussions about that on the web. If you run benchmark software to measure the
performance of striped SSD drives, there is a significant speed increase. Many claim however that in real world
usage, the advantage is insignificant and doesn’t justify the data security risk.
hello i have 4 hd 2 are 1t and 2 are 1.5t whats the best raid setup i should use
Your RAID5 diagram looks wrong to me, but it’s not helped by being unclear which blocks constitute a full stripe-set,
(eg is it 1a 1b 1c etc) and by labelling a number of blocks with just the word “parity”. Wikipedia is clearer!
I redid all drawings and hope they are now clearer as well as better looking.
Im thinking of using the Raid 5 for my server for our business, thanks for the infor
How can i calculate the effective space if i have 3 hard disk of 600 GB and i want to setup a RAD-5?
RAID10=(mirrors in stripe mode), and the advantage is that if a disk fails you only need to recover the mirror wich is on
degraded mode. In a RAID01 you need to recover the full mirror (like in RAID01 mode).
Thanks.
Hi, there is a mistake. RAID 0+1 ain’t RAID10. RAID 1+0 is commonly named RAID10.
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what are you implying…
Fixed – Fine nuances like that are difficult to grasp for me since English is not my native language.
Running raid0 bootable, partitioned with 2 drives, boot and root, minimum swap on cf cards.
One additional ques: I assume RAID 5 is the same as RAID 4+1? Thanks
No it isn’t
Hello:
Joe
ATT Corp
West Demoines IA
what is raid7?
How to define RAID 5 performance for 8*600 GB? For rotating Disc.
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Raid 0+1 has fault tolerance. From everything I am seeing on comparisons between both, if you only have 4 disks,
the fault tolerance and performance are the same. If you have 6 disks, then 1+0 offers greater fault tolerance, and
0+1 offers greater speed.
My guess based on my mathematical intuition is that if you have a number of drives that is a power of 2 it will be the
same. Otherwise, 1+0 will give you greater fault tolerance with less performance improvement and 0+1 will give you
greater performance with less improvement in fault tolerance.
RAID 1 + 0 through a HW controller for the first layer and mobo for the second layer would technically show you as
having 2 disks since the RAID card would only show 2 to the motherboard which would then combine those two,
therefore you would only see 2 drives unless you opened up the computer itself.
Dear All,
I am having a problem with HP prolaint Ml150 G3 server its o/s windows server 2003 is not booting properly it has 2
hard disk 250 GB each hot swap able is it possible that I access both or any one hard disks data by attatching it to
some other system or if possible then through which operating system.
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RAID=Redundant Array of Independent Disks
you can achieve raid10 with 2 disks but it makes no sense to do that, this would slow your drive down which negates
the purpose of striping in the first place, you will have 2 read/write operations on same disk making your drive work
harder than it has to which would cause failure sooner.
that type of setup would be great for testing purposes, (not for speed obviously), if you are lacking resources.
I need to deal with very large data set with typical file size of 1-7gb, hundreds of them, in a workstation. Both read
and write. I can only fit 4 disks for RAID purpose, what’s the best option? Would Raid 3 be better than Raid10? It seems
like Raid 3 can write in parallel in more than 1/2 of the total number of disks and lose only 1/4 of total storage.
Raid 5 only requires a minimum of 3 disks. With 4 disks, you will only loose 1/4 of your HD space. As for file size,
that is upto whatever file system you put on the volume created by you Raid array.
In simplistic terms:
I have used RAID 6 in one of my server. This has allowed me to create two hot swap disks. I deceided to use it on case
scenarios such as: if two active disks fail at the same time. or if two disks will fail at diferent intervals but the chance
of getting a new replacement is in the process and has not arrived yet. Featured in a NEC server rack mount.
I have head that the government is now doing work on RAID -17 (yes, negative 17). This technology is based on
tensors and promises to put all other RAID to shame.
Actually you can have RAID 1+0 with only two disks.
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you can get 1+0 on two disk using two partitions. this can be done with software raid. dunno if HW controllers can
support this.
Don’t the HP tools state “1(+0)”? On some controllers such as HP ones, all available options can be selected even if
there aren’t enough disks available. With 2 disks, selecting RAID 1+0 effectively gives you a RAID 1 set. The disks won’t
be striped.
Many thanks, glad your answer was 1st hit google in my search
I am a newbie when it comes to NAS. I am trying to configure 4 drives of 3 TB each. If I use RAID 1, what is my
effective capacity?
As stated in the RAID 1 section: ‘The main disadvantage is that the effective storage capacity is only half of the
total drive capacity because all data get written twice.’. That means your effective capacity will be 6 TB.
In the HP ACU page, I see on our array two disks, labeled as RAID 1+0. However, if I understand it correctly, RAID 1+0
is a four disk minimum. How can you have RAID 1+0 with two disks? Isn’t this essentially RAID 1?
19 of 19 23-Apr-18, 4:31 PM