Selecting a raid method, Alternative fault-tolerance methods, Alternative – HP Smart Storage Administrator User Manual

Page 116: Fault-tolerance methods

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Troubleshooting 116

Item

RAID 0

RAID 1+0 RAID 5

RAID 6
(ADG)

RAID 1(0)
(ADM)

Alternative name

Striping (no

fault

tolerance)

Mirroring

Distributed

Data

Guarding

Advanced

Data

Guarding

Advanced

Data

Mirroring

Formula for number of drives usable

for data (n = total number of drives in
array)

n

n/2

n-1

n-2

n/3

Percentage of drive space usable* 100%

50%

67% to 93% 50% to 96% 33%

Minimum number of physical drives 1

2

3

4

3

Tolerates failure of one physical drive No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Tolerates simultaneous failure of

more than one physical drive

No

Only if no

two failed

drives are in
the same

mirrored

pair

No

Yes

Only if no

three drives

are in the
same mirror

group**

Read performance

High

High

High

High

High

Write performance

High

Medium

Low

Low

Medium

Relative cost

Low

High

Medium

Medium

Very high

*Values for the percentage of drive space usable are calculated with these assumptions: (1) all physical drives in the
array have the same capacity; (2) online spares are not used; (3) no more than 14 physical drives are used per array for

RAID 5; and (4) no more than 56 drives are used with RAID 6 (ADG).

**Mirror groups include the physical drives in each mirror.

Selecting a RAID method

Not all controllers support all RAID levels. To determine the RAID capabilities of your controller, see the
model-specific information for your controller on the HP website

(

http://www.hp.com/products/smartarray

).

Most important criterion

Also important

Suggested RAID level

Fault tolerance

Cost effectiveness

I/O performance

RAID 6

RAID 10 (ADM), RAID 1+0, RAID 50, RAID 60

Cost effectiveness

Fault tolerance

I/O performance

RAID 6

RAID 5 (RAID 0 if fault tolerance is not required)

I/O performance

Cost effectiveness

Fault tolerance

RAID 5 (RAID 0 if fault tolerance is not required)

RAID 10 (ADM), RAID 1+0, RAID 50, RAID 60

Alternative fault-tolerance methods

Your operating system may also support software-based RAID or controller duplexing.

Software-based RAID resembles hardware-based RAID, except that the operating system works with
logical drives as if they were physical drives. To protect against data loss caused by physical drive

failure, each logical drive must be in a different array from the others.

Controller duplexing uses two identical controllers with independent, identical sets of drives containing
identical data. In the unlikely event of a controller failure, the remaining controller and drives will service

all requests.

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