Physical disk, Pnp (plug and play), Port – Dell PowerEdge RAID Controller S100 User Manual

Page 108: Raid (redundant array of independent disks), Raid levels, Raid management utility, Rebuild, Redundancy, Redundant virtual disk, Replacement disk

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108

Glossary

system. The PERC Virtual Disk Management utility, accessed by pressing

<Ctrl><R> at system startup, is built on elements called controls. Each control

performs a function. The functions include procedures you can use to configure

physical disks and virtual disks. The PERC Virtual Disk Management utility differs

from the Dell Inc. system BIOS, which contains the BIOS settings for each Dell

platform and is accessed by pressing <F2> during system startup.
P

H YS I C A L

D

I SK

A non-volatile, randomly-addressable device for storing data.

Physical disks are rewriteable and commonly referred to as disk drives.
P

N

P (P

L U G

A N D

P

L A Y

) — A technology that allows automatic recognition of

interface cards and devices when plugged into a PC.
P

O R T

A connection point to a RAID controller, disk drive, enclosure, or another

device.
RAID (R

E D U N D A N T

A

R RA Y

O F

I

N D E PE N D E N T

D

I S K S

) — An array of multiple

independent physical disks managed together to yield higher reliability and/or

performance exceeding that of a single physical disk. The virtual disk appears to the

operating system as a single storage unit. I/O is expedited because several disks can be

accessed simultaneously. Redundant RAID levels (RAID levels 1, 5, and 10) provide

data protection.
RAID L

E V E L S

A set of techniques applied to the physical disks in a virtual disk to

deliver higher data availability, and/or performance characteristics to host

environments. Each virtual disk must have a RAID level assigned to it.
RAID M

A N A G E M E N T

U

T I L I T Y

A RAID management utility (PERC Virtual Disk

Management utility) is used to configure physical disks and virtual disks. Use the

PERC Virtual Disk Management utility if the operating system has not yet been

installed on the controller.
R

E B U I L D

The regeneration of all data to a replacement disk in a redundant virtual

disk (RAID levels 1, 5, and 10) after a physical disk failure. A disk rebuild normally

occurs without interrupting normal operations on the affected virtual disk, though

some degradation of performance of the disk subsystem can occur.
R

E D U N D A N C Y

The provision of multiple interchangeable components to perform

a single function to cope with failures and errors. Common forms of hardware

redundancy are disk mirroring, implementations of parity disks, or distributed parity.
R

E D U N D A N T

V

I R T U A L

D

I SK

A redundant virtual disk is one which has redundant

data on physical disks that can be used to rebuild a failed physical disk. A virtual disk

can use disk striping across the physical disks, disk mirroring or parity to provide

redundancy. This offers protection in case of a physical disk failure.
R

E PL A CE M E N T

D

I S K

A physical disk that replaces a failed physical disk in a virtual

disk.

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