Users Guide

RAID Level 1 (Mirroring)
RAID 1 is the simplest form of maintaining redundant data. In RAID 1, data is mirrored or duplicated on one or more physical disks. If a
physical disk fails, data can be rebuilt using the data from the other side of the mirror.
RAID 1 characteristics:
Groups n + n disks as one virtual disk with the capacity of n disks. The controllers currently supported by Storage Management allow
the selection of two disks when creating a RAID 1. Because these disks are mirrored, the total storage capacity is equal to one disk.
Data is replicated on both the disks.
When a disk fails, the virtual disk still works. The data is read from the mirror of the failed disk.
Better read performance, but slightly slower write performance.
Redundancy for protection of data.
RAID 1 is more expensive in terms of disk space since twice the number of disks are used than required to store the data without
redundancy.
RAID Level 5 (Striping With Distributed Parity)
RAID 5 provides data redundancy by using data striping in combination with parity information. Rather than dedicating a physical disk to
parity, the parity information is striped across all physical disks in the disk group.
Managing Storage Devices
169