Chapter 4. Redundant Array of Independent Disks (RAID)

Chapter 4. Redundant Array of Independent Disks (RAID)

Chapter 4. Redundant Array of Independent Disks (RAID)

4.1. What is RAID?
4.2. Who Should Use RAID?
4.3. Hardware RAID versus Software RAID
4.4. RAID Levels and Linear Support
4.5. Configuring Software RAID

The basic idea behind RAID is to combine multiple small, inexpensive disk drives into an array to accomplish performance or redundancy goals not attainable with one large and expensive drive. This array of drives appears to the computer as a single logical storage unit or drive.

4.1. What is RAID?

RAID allows information to access several disks. RAID uses techniques such as disk striping (RAID Level 0), disk mirroring (RAID Level 1), and disk striping with parity (RAID Level 5) to achieve redundancy, lower latency, increased bandwidth, and maximized ability to recover from hard disk crashes.

RAID consistently distributes data across each drive in the array. RAID then breaks down the data into consistently-sized chunks (commonly 32K or 64k, although other values are acceptable). Each chunk is then written to a hard drive in the RAID array according to the RAID level employed. When the data is read, the process is reversed, giving the illusion that the multiple drives in the array are actually one large drive.