2introduction to raid, 2 segmenting disks – Rosewill HDD RAID RSV-S4-X User Manual

Page 10

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4 Bay SATA to eSATA 3.5” HDD RAID Storage System

RSV-S4-X

User Manual

10

2

INTRODUCTION TO RAID

2.1

RAID VOLUMES

RAID technology allows one or more disks to be combined into a logical volume which

provides greater performance and/or protection than standard disk drives. These volumes,

also known as RAID Groups, appear like regular disk drives to the operating system and can

be partitioned, formatted and used just like any other normal disk. The complexity of the RAID

is hidden within the driver.

There are several different methods of combining disks, each with its own advantages and

disadvantages. Each method is referred to as a RAID “level” such as RAID 1, or RAID 5. The

details of each level are summarized below and detailed in the following sections.

RAID LEVEL

CONFIGURED

AS

ADVANTAGES

DISADVANTAGES

0

Striped

Excellent performance, low cost

No data protection

1

Mirrored

Excellent data protection

High cost

10 Mirrored

Striped

High performance, excellent
data protection.

High cost.

5 Parity

RAID

Good data protection, good
value

Some performance
degradation for writes.

Combination Concatenated

Good performance, low cost,
large Volume size

No data protection

Single Drive /
Segment

Contiguous Same

as

single

disk

Same as single disk

2.2 SEGMENTING DISKS

For increased versatility, the SATARAID5 software allows individual disks to be divided into

smaller segments which can then be combined into different volumes. As an example, if a

user has one set of data that must be protected at all costs, another set of data which should

be protected at reasonable cost and another set that doesn’t need any protection at all; the

user can divide three disks into sections as shown in Figure 1. The yellow regions define the

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