How do you remember(if you really do :-)) all the different levels and what each level does? Can anyone suggest an easy way to remember?
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0 - S (stripe) 1 - M (mirror) 5 - P (parity) 10 - MS (mirror + stripe) Smart Men Pay MicroSoft or Silly Men Pay MicroSoft | |||
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I remember them in order by the number of punches in the face a failure of any particular level equates to: RAID 6 - six punches in the face when it fails, because you had two dang parity drives and thought you were really uber safe....until your Adaptec controller said "no arrays detected". RAID 5 - five punches in the face when it fails, especially when your Adaptec controller says "no arrays detected"....or a second drive fails during a rebuild. RAID 1 - one punch in the face, especially if you were using a hardware controller and thought you could just take a drive out and grab the data easily...because, hey, it's just a mirror, right? RAID 0 - zero punches in the face, because you were expecting it and had full backups. P.S. I do not work for Adaptec. | |||||||||||
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0 = No Redundancy 1 = 100% = 100% Redundancy 10 = 1 and 0 together 5 = halfway in-between 0 and 10 (0 uses 4/4 disks, 10 uses 2/4 disks, 5 uses 3/4 disks) 6 = like 5, plus 1 extra disk needed (e. g. 3/5 disks) | |||
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You learn terms you use daily. 0, 1 and 5 become natural, 6 is just 5 with an extra disk. I've never come across 2,3 or 4. | |||
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RAID 0 - Best performance, poor availability, only suitable for temporary files RAID 10 - Good performance for twice the price, quick expansions, rebuilds are straight disk-disk copies RAID 5+ - Cheap, poor performance for small random writes (4x), 10+ hour expansions, risky rebuilds, not suitable for hypervisors | |||
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Well...
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4 = like 5, but -1 point for possible hot spot problem 3 = like 5, but -2 points for seeking like a single drive | |||
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People seem to mostly confuse 0 and 1, but it's pretty easy to remember that RAID 0 provides zero help when you lose a disk. RAID 10 is really RAID 1+0 (simple math! ;-) RAID 2 to 4 aren't really worth remembering although RAID 4 is what NetApp uses. Everyone seems to know RAID 5, so you just need to remember that RAID 6 is an extra parity drive. (RAID 6 doesn't really exist, BTW, it's also sometimes called RAID-DP for Dual Parity) | |||
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From a security aspect:
0 -> Bad for security, 1 -> Good for security Usually people only have problems to remember what 0 do and what 1 do. | |||
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