Redundant Arrays of Independent Disks
Redundant Arrays of Independent Disks
Redundant Arrays of Independent Disks
What does RAID do? Now imagine that the cake are you hard drives and that frosting is the data. As you can see that the 2 layer cake has the same data as each other. Now pretend that something eats a layer of the cake (Virus.) Now is it was a single layer cake all the frosting would be gone but since there is more than one layer the same frosting remains.
So basically a RAID, with more hard drives can use one of the hard drives to act as a backup in case something happens though you lose potential data
RAID level 0 This level is not actually considered a type of raid, and is fairly common. Its not RAID because this level is not redundant in the slightest and only uses one driver. Therefore the computer has no protection from a wiped out hard drive. It Works by stripping the data and Spreading the data between the Drives.
Drive 1 Block 1 Block 2 Block 3 1 3 5 Drive 2 2 4 6
Pros: Faster (doesnt repeat all data.) No loss of data capacity Cons: Not redundant.
Raid Level 1
Basically one drive mirrors the other, however this slows down the writing time by a . Mirrors the data in-between drives.
Drive 2 1 3 5
Drive 3 2 4 6
Drive 4 2 4 6
Raid level 5
Works on binary, and using odd and even numbers, Im not quite sure. But if one of the drives is damaged it will actually repair itself.
Pros: Better array performance Redundent. Can perform a hot swap. (Switch hard drives while computer is operating. Cons: Need 3 drives When it rebuilds your performance will degrade.
Drive 2 2 P 5
Drive 3 P 4 6
There was also Raid level 2, 3, and 4 but they didnt work out, so they were never released.
So you could say they failed
To sum it up, most people have RAID 1 or RAID 0, which is all they really need. But for any small business and bigger you might need RAID 5, RAID 1+0, or RAID 0+1 to protect your data.
Patented 1987
Built in 1989
1979 Philips demonstrates optical storage drive technology as part of a joint venture with control data corp. 1988 David A. Patterson leads a team that defines RAID standards for improved performance, reliability. 1995 EMC develops the concept of networkattached storage
Raid 1 was released on June 5, 2007 Raid 5 was released in 1995, on June 8.
Raid 1+0 was released on June 7, 2007
3ware
Adaptec
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/87093/The_Story_So_Far
http://www.staff.uni-mainz.de/neuffer/scsi/what_is_raid.html http://compreviews.about.com/od/storage/l/aaRAIDPage1.htm
http://www.pcguide.com/ref/hdd/perf/raid/whyShould-c.html
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