Acer Veriton 7600GTR Service Manual page 72

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RAID 1
RAID 1 works by writing identical sets of information to two drives in an array. When the controller is sent a
64KB file to be written to a two disk RAID 1 array, the controller sends identical copies of this 64KB file to both
disks in the array. Reads are the same as on a single drive: the controller requests the file from one of the two
drives.
The special feature of RAID 1 is its fault tolerance. If either of the two drives in the array fails, no data is lost. If/
when a drive fails, the RAID controller simply uses the information off of the drive that is still available. When a
new drive is added to the array to fix the failed one, a mirroring occurs in which the data from the good drive is
written to the new drive to recreate the array again.
As one could suspect, RAID 1 offers very little in terms of performance. When requesting data from a drive,
some RAID controllers take information from the drive that is not busy or closer to the desired information,
theoretically resulting in faster data access. When writing, on the other hand, there is some overhead when
compared to a single drive as the controller must duplicate the file it is sent and then pass it along to the drives.
In a RAID 1 setup, identical drives are best in order to prevent lost space. Since the same data is being written
to two drives, the size of the RAID 1 array is equal to the size of the smallest drive in the array. For example, if
a 20GB drive and a 30GB drive are used in a RAID 1 setup, the array would only be 20GB with the 10 extra
gigabytes on the 30GB drive going to waste. The performance difference between two drives is also an issue
here, since a faster drive would have to wait for a slower drive before it could write more information.
RAID 1 is a good solution for those looking for security over speed. Although not the slowest of the common
RAID types, RAID 1 can be slower than a single drive in some cases (more on that in the benchmarks). What
RAID 1 does provide is a very safe environment, where failure of a single drive does not equate to any down
time.
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