Foxconn A75M User manual - Page 78
RAID 0 Striped, RAID 1 Mirror, RAID 10 Striped Mirror, Span JBOD, Comparison Table
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RAID 0 (Striped) RAID 0 reads and writes sectors of data interleaved among multiple drives. If any disk member fails, it affects the entire array. The disk array data capacity is equal to the number of drive members times the capacity of the smallest member. RAID 0 does not support fault tolerance. RAID 1 (Mirror) RAID 1 writes duplicate data onto a pair of drives and reads both sets of data in parallel. If one of the mirrored drives suffers a mechanical failure or does not respond, the remaining drive will continue to function. Due to redundancy, the drive capacity of the array is the capacity of the smallest drive. RAID 10 (Striped Mirror) RAID 10 is a combination of striping and mirroring. This configuration provides optimal speed and reliability, but you need four SATA hard disks. Span (JBOD) JBOD stands for "Just a Bunch of Disks". Each drive is accessed as if it were on a standard SCSI host bus adapter. This is useful when a single drive configuration is needed, but it offers no speed improvement or fault tolerance. A spanned volume is a formatted partition which data is stored on more than one hard disk, yet appears as one volume. Unlike RAID, spanned volumes have no fault-tolerance, so if any disk fails, the data on the whole volume could be lost. Additionally, the system or boot partitions cannot be included in a spanned volume. FAT16/32 and NTFS file systems may be used, and the volume can span up to 32 hard disks. 5 Comparison Table : Solution RAID0 RAID1 RAID10 Span Hard Disks No. >=2 2 >=4 (Even number) Capacity All 50% Smallest*2 >=1 All Performance Highest Read faster High Reliability Dangerous Excellent Excellent Application Look for speed 100% Data backup Unlimited budget none Dangerous Big disk space 71