B-raid level comparison table, Appendix b: raid level comparison table, Maxnas owner’s manual 65 – MicroNet Technology MAXNAS R8 User Manual

Page 65

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MaxNAS Owner’s Manual

65

Appendix B: RAID Level Comparison Table

RAID

Level

Description

Min.

Drives

Max.

Drives

Capacity Data

Reliability

Data

Transfer Rate

I/O

Request Rates

Span Also known as disk spanning. Data

is distributed sequentially to all

drives. There is no data protection.

1

4

(N)

Disks

No data protection

Same as a single disk same as a single disk

0

Also known as striping

Data distributed across multiple

drives in the array simultaneously.

There is no data protection

1

4

(N)

Disks

No data

Protection

Very High

Very High for

Both Reads and Writes

1

Also known as mirroring

All data replicated on N Separated

disks. N is always a multiple of 2.

This is a high availability Solution,

but due to the 100% data duplication,

it is also a costly solution.

2

4

1/(N )

Disks

Lower than RAID 6,

Higher than RAID 5

Reads are higher

Than a single disk;

Writes similar to a sin-

gle disk

Reads are twice faster

than a single disk;

Write are similar to a

single disk.

10

Also known as striped mirroring. Data

and parity information is subdivided

and distributed across all disks. This

is a high availability Solution, but

due to the 100% data duplication, it

is also a costly solution.

4

4

1/2 (N)

Disks

Lower than RAID 6,

higher than RAID 5

Reads are similar to

RAID 0

Writes are similar to

single disk

Reads are similar to

RAID 0

Writes are similar to sin-

gle disk

5

Also known Block-Interleaved

distributed Parity. Data and parity

information is subdivided and

distributed across all disk. Parity

must be the equal to the smallest

disk capacity in the array. Parity

information normally stored on a

dedicated parity disk.

3

5

(N-1)

Disks

Lower than RAID 1, 10

Higher than a single

drive

Reads are similar to

RAID 0;

Writes are slower than

RAID 0

Reads are similar to

RAID 0;

Writes are slower than a

single disk.

6

Also known as dual parity. Similar

to RAID 5, but does two different

parity computations or the same

computation on overlapping subsets

of the data. The RAID 6 can offer

fault tolerance greater that RAID

1 or RAID 5 but only consumes

the capacity of 2 disk drives for

distributed parity data reliability

similar to RAID 0.

4

5

(N-2

Disks)

Highest Reliability

Reads are similar to

RAID 0;

Writes are slower than

RAID 5

Reads are similar to

RAID 0;

Writes are slower than a

single disk.

B-RAID Level Comparison Table

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