Appendix ii: raid setup, Introduction to raid, Before create raid array – Albatron Technology KI51PV-754 User Manual

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Mainboard KI51PV-754

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Appendix II: RAID Setup

Introduction to RAID

RAID (Redundant Array of Independent Disks) technology is a sophisticated disk management

system that manages multiple disk drives. It enhances I/O performance and provides
redundancy in order to prevent the loss of data in case of individual disk failure. The RAID

facility on this board provides RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 0+1, RAID JBOD, and RAID 5.

Disk Striping (RAID 0)

Striping is a performance-oriented, non-redundant disk storage technology. With RAID striping,
multiple disks are used to form a larger virtual disk. Data is then striped or mapped across all

the physical disks. In this way, multiple I/O operations can be executed in parallel, enhancing
performance. Striping does not provide fault tolerance. The minimum number of hard drives for

RAID 0 is 2.

Disk Mirroring (RAID 1)

With Disk Mirroring there are redundant disks that mirror the primary disks. Data that is written
to the primary disks are also written to the redundant disks. This redundancy provides fault

tolerant protection from a single disk failure. If a read/write failure occurs on one drive, the
system can still read and write data using the other drive. The minimum number of drives for a

RAID 1 configuration is 2. You are required to use an even number of drives.

Disk Striped Mirroring (RAID 0+1)

This mode combines both the performance benefits of RAID 0 with the fault tolerance of RAID 1.
The minimum number of drives for RAID 0+1 configuration is 4 drives. This configuration also

requires an even number of drives. Note: All mirrored configurations or striped/mirrored
configurations should use drives of the same size.

RAID SPAN (RAID JBOD)

RAID SPAN allows JBOD (Just a Bunch Of Disks) configurations which simply uses multiple

disks to form a larger virtual disk without any other specialized disk management functionality.
RAID SPAN is not considered a standard RAID implementation.

Disk Rotating Parity Array (RAID 5)

RAID 5 is one of the most popular implementations of RAID. It utilizes the configurations of Byte
Stripping and Block Stripping, and writes the data to multiple disks. The minimum number of

drives for a RAID 5 configuration is 3. It possesses the

stripe error correction information;

therefore, once a read/write failure occurs on one drive,

the system can still read and

write data using the other drive.

As result,

the performance of RAID 5 can substantially

decrease in a write-heavy environment.



Before create RAID Array

Before you configure your RAID Array, you have to enable the “RAID Config” option in the BIOS

Setup Utility.
1. After you boot your system, press the “Del” key when prompted to enter the BIOS Setup

Utility.

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