Dell POWERVAULT MD3620I User Manual

Page 42

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Planning: MD3600i Series Storage Array Terms and Concepts

I/O performance is greatly improved by spreading the I/O load across many

physical disks. Although it offers the best performance of any RAID level,

RAID 0 lacks data redundancy. Select this option only for non-critical data,

because failure of one physical disk results in the loss of all data. Examples of

RAID 0 applications include video editing, image editing, prepress

applications, or any application that requires high bandwidth.

RAID 1

RAID 1 uses disk mirroring so that data written to one physical disk is

simultaneously written to another physical disk. This RAID level offers fast

performance, the best data availability, and the highest disk overhead. RAID 1

is recommended for small databases or other applications that do not require

large capacity. RAID 1 provides full data redundancy. For example,

accounting, payroll, or financial applications.

RAID 5

RAID 5 uses parity and striping data across all physical disks (distributed

parity) to provide high data throughput and data redundancy, especially for

small random access. This is a versatile RAID level and is suited for multi-user

environments where typical I/O size is small and there is a high proportion of

read activity such as file, application, database, web, e-mail, news, and

intranet servers.

RAID 6

RAID 6 is similar to RAID 5 but provides an additional parity disk for better

redundancy. This is the most versatile RAID level and is suited for multi-user

environments where typical I/O size is small and there is a high proportion of

read activity. RAID 6 is recommended when large size physical disks are used

or large number of physical disks are used in a disk group.

RAID 10

RAID 10, a combination of RAID 1 and RAID 0, uses disk striping across

mirrored disks. It provides high data throughput and complete data

redundancy. Utilizing an even number of physical disks (four or more) creates

a RAID level 10 disk group and/or virtual disk. Because RAID levels 1 and 10

use disk mirroring, half of the capacity of the physical disks is utilized for

mirroring. This leaves the remaining half of the physical disk capacity for

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