About the forteraid and drive modes – Glyph ForteRAID User Manual

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About the ForteRAID and Drive Modes

The ForteRAID enclosure contains four hard disk drives, which function as one single volume. Through the

use of the Glyph Manager software utility, it supports six drive modes: RAID 0, 1, 3, 5, 10, and Spanning. Each

drive mode has its own advantages, depending upon the application.

RAID 0 (striping) is designed for increased speed but offers no redundancy benefits. RAID 0 spreads

data across array members in blocks, and is ideal for situations where speed and capacity are most

important. It’s a proven technology for video editing, working with huge graphics files, sound librar-

ies, and streaming instruments that play hundreds of samples simultaneously. RAID 0 provides the

full capacity of the drives, and is the default shipping drive mode. Since data is written without any

form of parity data-checking, it allows for the fastest data transfer of all other RAID levels. However,

if one drive becomes damaged, the data on both drives can become corrupted. RAID 0 is not redun-

dant or fault tolerant like RAID levels 1, 3, and 5, but the trade off is that it’s the fastest of all RAID

levels. MAKE SURE TO BACKUP YOUR DATA OFTEN!

RAID 1 (mirroring) uses only two of the 4 internal drives. It offers the data redundancy and real-time

backup by writing the same data to two hard drives at the same time. Should a drive failure happen,

data is still available on the remaining drive. Usable capacity is equal to capacity of 1 drive. For ex-

ample, a 4TB ForteRAID will be seen as a 1TB drive. Reading and writing occurs on both drives simul-

taneously so that each of the drives contains exactly the same data, mirroring each other. If either of

the drives should fail the other is there to seamlessly continue to provide operation.

RAID 3 (striping with a dedicated parity drive) offers speed and data redundancy by using parity

data which is stored on a dedicated drive. Should a drive failure happen, the remaining members of

the array calculate the missing data and rebuild to a spare drive. The spare drive can be inserted after

the failure, or can be online and waiting (hot spare). For RAID 3, usable capacity is 3/4 of the entire

capacity. For RAID 3 + hot spare, usable capacity is half the entire capacity.

RAID 5 (striping with distributed parity) offers speed and data redundancy by using parity data

which is striped across all drives. Should a drive failure happen, the remaining members of the array

calculate the missing data and rebuild to a spare drive. The spare drive can be inserted after the fail-

ure, or can be online and waiting (hot spare). For RAID 5, usable capacity is 3/4 of the entire capacity.

For RAID 5 + hot spare, usable capacity is half the entire capacity.

RAID 10 (striping + mirroring) creates two pairs of mirrored drives, and stripes across them for a

very good balance of speed and redundancy. Usable capacity is equal to half of the entire capacity.

RAID 10 is perfect for situations where the data integrity is more important than the capacity, such as

audio recording and editing, photography, and sample libraries/sound libraries.

Spanning mode simply shows all four drives as one large volume and data is written sequentially

across them. When the first drive fills to the limit, data is then written to the next drive. This mode

is useful for applications requiring large volumes, but not requiring the speed of RAID 0. Spanning

provides the full capacity of the drives, with no benefits to speed or redundancy.

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