madison

raid

54 Results

Dictionary

RAID

(Redundant Array of Independent Disks) A disk subsystem that increases performance or provides fault tolerance or both. RAID uses two or more regular hard drives and a RAID controller, which is...

Dictionary

Definition: RAID

(Redundant Array of Independent Disks) A disk subsystem that increases performance or provides fault tolerance or both. RAID uses two or more regular hard drives and a RAID controller, which is plugged into motherboards that do not have RAID circuits. Today, most motherboards have built-in RAID but not necessarily every RAID configuration (see below). In the past, RAID has also been accomplished by software only but was much slower. In the late 1980s, the "I" in RAID stood for "inexpensive" but was later changed to "independent."

In large storage area networks (SANs), floor-standing RAID units are common with terabytes of storage and huge amounts of cache memory. RAID is also used in desktop computers by gamers for speed and by business users for reliability. Following are the various RAID configurations. See NAS and SAN.


RAID

RAID 0 - Disk Striping for Performance (Popular)
Widely used for gaming, disk striping interleaves data across multiple drives for performance. However, there are no safeguards against failure. See RAID 0.



RAID

RAID 1 - Mirroring for Fault Tolerance (Popular)
Widely used, RAID 1 writes two drives at the same time. It provides the highest reliability but doubles the number of drives needed.

RAID 10 combines RAID 1 mirroring with RAID 0 striping for both safety and performance. See RAID 1 and RAID 10.



RAID

RAID 3 - Speed and Fault Tolerance
Data are striped across three or more drives for performance, and parity is computed for safety. Similar to RAID 3, RAID 4 uses block level striping but is not as popular. See RAID 3 and RAID parity.



RAID

RAID 5 - Speed and Fault Tolerance (Popular)
Data are striped across three or more drives for performance, and parity is computed for safety. RAID 5 is similar to RAID 3, except that the parity is distributed to all drives. RAID 6 offers more reliability than RAID 5 by performing more parity computations. For more details, see RAID 5.



RAID



RAID

Big RAID
EMC has been a leader in high-end RAID systems for years with systems storing multiple terabytes of data. (Image courtesy of EMC Corporation.)



RAID

Little RAID
Arco was first to provide RAID 1 on IDE drives rather than SCSI. This two-drive unit connected to the motherboard with one cable like a single drive. (Image courtesy of Arco Computer Products, Inc., www.arcoide.com)



RAID

Early RAID
This RAID prototype was built by University of Berkeley graduate students in 1992. Housing 36 320MB disk drives, total storage was 11GB. (Image courtesy of The Computer History Museum, www.computerhistory.org)



RAID

USB RAID
Super Talent's USB 3.0 RAID drives provide RAID 0 storage that is faster than the internal hard disk. (Image courtesy of Super Talent Technology Corporation, www.supertalent.com)





Sponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources

  • Olympus offices raided by Japanese authorities

    The Olympus offices were raided by Japanese authorities on Wednesday as part of the ongoing investigation into the recent accounting scandal.

    Blog posts | December 21, 2011 7:21am PST

  • Can vendor MTBFs be trusted?

    Of course not, silly rabbit. But it isn't all their fault: for most users MTBFs are meaningless gibberish. Why rain on the parade?

    Blog posts | September 7, 2011 6:49am PDT

  • MacDefender taken down in raid by Russian authorities?

    MacDefender caused a malware crisis for the Mac in June 2011 but went suspiciously silent in July. Russian authorities may have busted the group responsible for supporting the fake AV program.

    Blog posts | August 4, 2011 9:19pm PDT

  • New Thunderbolt RAID iMac: lessons learned

    The Thunderbolt RAID/iMac out of the box experience isn't up to Apple standards. But how is it once the system stands up?

    Blog posts | July 19, 2011 7:33am PDT

  • New iMac with Thunderbolt RAID: 1st report

    Xmas in July: brand new quadcore I7 Sandy Bridge 3.4 GHz 27.5" iMac with Thunderbolt and new Thunderbolt storage array. Woo-hoo! How great is it? Here's a hint: I'm writing this on a Core Duo 2.

    Blog posts | July 18, 2011 6:54am PDT

  • Thunderbolt storage surprises at NAB '11

    Thunderbolt is off to a promising start at NAB '11. Vendor support and product range is greater than expected.

    Blog posts | April 13, 2011 8:38am PDT

  • Google-style storage comes to the SMB

    Google and Amazon have really low storage costs because they skipped the costly RAID arrays offered by big storage companies. Now that technology is available for prosumers and small businesses -...

    Blog posts | March 28, 2011 8:44am PDT

  • Promise expects Q2 release for Thunderbolt RAID boxes

    Storage vendor Promise Technology late Thursday announced it will ship in the second quarter 4-bay and 6-bay Pegasus R series RAID systems supporting the new Thunderbolt bus used on the new Apple...

    Blog posts | February 24, 2011 9:04pm PST

  • CES cool storage - pt. 1

    Checking out new storage products at CES. Here's the cool stuff that caught my eye on Day 1.

    Blog posts | January 7, 2011 3:42am PST

  • Flash cache for RAID

    Caching makes your RAID array go faster. But if you lose power your data can be corrupted. The old solution: a battery. The new and better solution: flash memory - with a twist.

    Blog posts | August 11, 2010 7:32am PDT

  • RAID 5: theory & reality

    RAID 5 pain is on message boards and support forums all over the net. Failed rebuilds, lost data, unhappy bosses. Why isn't RAID 5 as reliable as it is supposed to be?

    Blog posts | June 28, 2010 7:32am PDT

  • Synology DiskStation DS410 (photos)

    Synology announced Thursday a new four-bay NAS server that costs only $499. The new NAS supports up to 8TB of storage in different RAID setups including RAID 1, RAID 0, RAID 5, and Synology Hybrid...

  • The disk error mystery

    You'd think that after 50 years and many billions sold, disk drives would be well understood. And you'd be wrong. Take the case of latent sector errors.

    Blog posts | March 10, 2010 5:28am PST

  • Why RAID 6 stops working in 2019

    Three years ago I warned that RAID 5 would stop working in 2009. Sure enough, no enterprise storage vendor now recommends RAID 5. Now it's RAID 6, which protects against 2 drive failures. But in...

    Blog posts | February 22, 2010 6:50am PST

  • Build your own high-performance video/photo editing PC ... for under $1,500

    Continuing my "Build your own" series, I'm going to follow on from building a Home Theater PC and today look at building a how to build a high-performance video/photo editing PC ... for under $1,500.

    Blog posts | February 8, 2010 7:28am PST

  • Should I just build my own systems?

    Last week I built myself a web server from parts. It's nothing fancy (anyone remember the Pentium 4?), but it was completely free and is quite happily hosting my new website. It sits in my...

    Blog posts | January 27, 2010 12:36pm PST

  • Buffalo LinkStation Duo (photos)

    Buffalo releases at CES 2010 a refreshed design of the LinkStation Duo NAS server. The new server offers a large amount of storage, RAID configurations, and ease of use for home and small-business...

  • Shopping at the second-hand server store

    Virtualization or not - you're still spending too much on hardware if you buy it new. Whether you need one server or a pallet load, it's all available at 15-20% of the original price, for...

    Blog posts | November 18, 2009 6:09am PST

  • Alienware reveals M15x laptop with 2GHz Core i7; new desktop designs

    Dell on Tuesday announced that its Alienware performance gaming division will offer their 15-inch M15x laptop with a 2GHz Core i7 processor and introduced new designs for its Aurora and Area-51...

    Blog posts | September 23, 2009 3:25pm PDT

  • Build a RAID 6 array for $100/TB

    Build your own cloud-style storage for $100/TB that makes Amazon's S3 look pricey. Perfect for ripping 10,000 DVDs to disk!

    Blog posts | September 1, 2009 10:36am PDT

Click Here

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity