Raid 0: striping, no redundancy, Raid 10: striping, mirror spans two drives, Drive mode descriptions – Sonnet Technologies Fusion R400S RAID (With Drives) User Manual

Page 9

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Drive Mode Descriptions

To configure the Fusion R400S RAID’s drives, refer to Select
Drive Mode on page 5.

The following pages describe the drive configuration modes
supported by this Sonnet product.

RAID 0: Striping, No Redundancy

RAID 0 (striping) is based on the fact that increased
performance can be achieved by simultaneously accessing
data across multiple drives, increasing data transfer rates
while reducing average access time by overlapping drive
seeks. Drives are accessed alternately, as if stacked one on
top of the other.

RAID 0 provides no data protection, but

offers the full capacity of the drives. If one drive fails, all
data within that stripe set is lost
. See Figure 9.

RAID Level 0 is used by applications requiring high
performance for non-critical data.

RAID 10: Striping, Mirror Spans Two Drives

RAID 10 increases data transfer rates while ensuring security
by writing the exact same data simultaneously to two
or more different drives. RAID 10 is used in applications
requiring higher performance and redundancy, combining
the attributes of RAID Levels 1 and 0. See

Figure 10.

RAID 10 offer 50% of the total capacity of the four drives.

Span: Concatenation, Volume Spans Four Drives

Span mode creates a single, large volume that spans all four
drives, writing files to the capacity of the first drive, then the
second drive, and so on. See

Figure 11. Span mode provides

no data protection.

Span formatting offers the full capacity of the four drives.

Disk 1

Stripe 1

Stripe 2

Stripe 3

Disk 2

Disk 3

Disk 4

RAID 0: Striping, No Redundancy

Figure 9

Disk 1

Data 1

Data 3

Data 5

Data 1

Data 3

Data 5

Stripe 1

Stripe 2

Stripe 3

Disk 2

Data 1

Data 3

Data 5

Data 2

Disk 3

Data 4

Data 6

Data 2

Data 4

Data 6

Disk 4

Data 2

Data 4

Data 6

RAID 10:

Striping, Mirror Spans Two Drives

Figure 10

Disk 1

Data 1

Data 2

Data 3

Data 4

Disk 2

Data 25

Data 26

Data 27

Data 28

Disk 3

Data 49

Data 50

Data 51

Data 52

Disk 4

Data 73

Data 74

Data 75

Data 76

Span (Concatenation, Big)

Figure 11

WARNING:

RAID 5 and 10 formatting improves

data accessibility and reliability during normal

operations, however, you still need a good backup strategy
for long-term protection of your data.

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