Raid Management - Unifosa Proware ep-2123-s6s6 User Manual

Sas to sas/sata raid subsystem
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SAS to SAS/SATA RAID Subsystem

RAID Management

The subsystem can implement several different levels of RAID technology. RAID levels
supported by the subsystem are shown below.
RAID Level
Block striping is provide, which yields higher
0
performance than with individual drives. There is
no redundancy.
Drives are paired and mirrored. All data is 100%
1
duplicated on an equivalent drive. Fully
redundant.
Data is striped across several physical drives.
3
Parity protection is used for data redundancy.
Data is striped across several physical drives.
5
Parity protection is used for data redundancy.
Data is striped across several physical drives.
Parity protection is used for data redundancy.
6
Requires N+2 drives to implement because of
two-dimensional parity scheme.
Combination of RAID levels 1 and 0. This level
provides striping and redundancy through
mirroring. RAID 10 requires the use of an even
10 (1E)
number of disk drives to achieve data protection,
while RAID 1E (Enhanced Mirroring) uses an odd
number of drives.
Combination of RAID levels 0 and 3. This level is
30
best implemented on two RAID 3 disk arrays
with data striped across both disk arrays.
RAID 50 provides the features of both RAID 0
and RAID 5. RAID 50 includes both parity and
50
disk striping across multiple drives. RAID 50 is
best implemented on two RAID 5 disk arrays
with data striped across both disk arrays.
RAID 60 combines both RAID 6 and RAID 0
features. Data is striped across disks as in RAID
0, and it uses double distributed parity as in
RAID 6. RAID 60 provides data reliability, good
overall performance and supports larger volume
60
sizes.
RAID 60 also provides very high reliability
because data is still available even if multiple disk
drives fail (two in each disk array).
16
User Manual
Description
Min. Drives
1
2
3
3
4
4 (3)
6
6
8

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