Spanning For Raid 10 Or Raid 50; Parity; Table 2-1. Spanning For Raid 10 And Raid 50; Table 2-2. Types Of Parity - Dell PowerEdge Expandable RAID Controller 3 User Manual

Expandable raid controller
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NOTE: Spanning two
contiguous RAID 0
logical drives does not
produce a new RAID level
or add fault tolerance. It
does increase the size of
the logical volume and
improves performance by
doubling the number of
spindles.
36
In t ro duc ti o n to RAI D

Spanning for RAID 10 or RAID 50

Table 2-1 describes how to configure RAID 10 and RAID 50 by spanning.
Ta b l e 2 - 1 . S p a n n i n g f o r R A I D 1 0 a n d R A I D 5 0
Level
Description
10
Configure RAID 10 by spanning two contiguous RAID 1 logical drives.
The RAID 1 logical drives must have the same stripe size.
NOTE: Refer to Chapter 11 "PERC 3 BIOS Configuration
Utility" for the configuration procedure for spanning RAID 1
logical drives.
50
Configure RAID 50 by spanning two contiguous RAID 5 logical drives.
The RAID 5 logical drives must have the same stripe size.
NOTE: Refer to Chapter 11 "PERC 3 BIOS Configuration
Utility" for the configuration procedure for spanning RAID 5
logical drives.

Parity

Parity generates a set of redundancy data from two or more parent data sets.
The redundancy data can be used to reconstruct one of the parent data sets.
Parity data does not fully duplicate the parent data sets. In RAID, this
method is applied to entire drives or stripes across all disk drives in an array.
The types of parity are shown in Table 2-2.
Ta b l e 2 - 2 . Ty p e s o f P a r i t y
Parity Type
Description
Dedicated
The parity of the data on two or more disk drives is stored on an
additional disk.
Distributed
The parity data is distributed across all drives in the system.
If a single disk drive fails, it can be rebuilt from the parity and the data on
the remaining drives. RAID level 5 combines distributed parity with disk
striping. Parity provides redundancy for one drive failure without
duplicating the contents of entire disk drives, but parity generation can slow
the write process. A dedicated parity scheme during normal read/write
operations is shown in Figure 2-4.

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