HP P4000 9.0 HP StorageWorks P4000 SAN Solution User Guide - Page 54

Configuring and managing RAID, RAID Levels - cost

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• Disk Health Table 9 Status and color definitions Status Normal Inactive Uninitialized Rebuilding Off or Removed Marginal Faulty Hot Spare Hot Spare Down Color Green Yellow / orange Yellow Blue Red Yellow Red Green Yellow Configuring and managing RAID Managing the RAID settings of a storage system includes: • Choosing the right RAID configuration for your storage needs • Setting or changing the RAID configuration, if necessary • Setting the rate for rebuilding RAID • Monitoring the RAID status for the storage system • Reconfiguring RAID when necessary RAID Levels The availability of certain RAID levels is determined by the number of storage system hard drives. Table 10 Descriptions of RAID levels RAID level Description RAID 0 - Striping (No Fault Tolerance) Offers the greatest capacity and performance without data protection. If you select this option, you will experience data loss if a hard drive that holds the data fails. However, because no logical drive capacity is used for redundant data, this method offers the best capacity. This method offers the best processing speed by reading two stripes on different hard drives at the same time and by not having a parity drive. RAID 1 - Mirroring Offers a good combination of data protection and performance. RAID 1 or drive mirroring creates fault tolerance by storing duplicate sets of data on a minimum of two hard drives. There must be an even number of drives for RAID 1. RAID 1 and RAID 1+0(10) are the most costly fault tolerance methods because they require 50 percent of the drive capacity to store the redundant data. RAID 1 mirrors the contents of one hard drive in the array onto another. If either hard drive fails, the other hard drive provides a backup copy of the files and normal system operations are not interrupted. 54 Storage Configuration: Disk RAID and Disk Management

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Disk Health
Table 9 Status and color definitions
Color
Status
Green
Normal
Yellow / orange
Inactive
Yellow
Uninitialized
Blue
Rebuilding
Red
Off or Removed
Yellow
Marginal
Red
Faulty
Green
Hot Spare
Yellow
Hot Spare Down
Configuring and managing RAID
Managing the RAID settings of a storage system includes:
Choosing the right RAID configuration for your storage needs
Setting or changing the RAID configuration, if necessary
Setting the rate for rebuilding RAID
Monitoring the RAID status for the storage system
Reconfiguring RAID when necessary
RAID Levels
The availability of certain RAID levels is determined by the number of storage system hard drives.
Table 10 Descriptions of RAID levels
Description
RAID level
Offers the greatest capacity and performance without data protection. If you select this
option, you will experience data loss if a hard drive that holds the data fails. However,
because no logical drive capacity is used for redundant data, this method offers the best
capacity. This method offers the best processing speed by reading two stripes on different
hard drives at the same time and by not having a parity drive.
RAID 0
Strip-
ing (No Fault
Tolerance)
Offers a good combination of data protection and performance. RAID 1 or drive mirroring
creates fault tolerance by storing duplicate sets of data on a minimum of two hard drives.
There must be an even number of drives for RAID 1. RAID 1 and RAID 1+0(10) are the
most costly fault tolerance methods because they require 50 percent of the drive capacity
to store the redundant data. RAID 1 mirrors the contents of one hard drive in the array onto
another. If either hard drive fails, the other hard drive provides a backup copy of the files
and normal system operations are not interrupted.
RAID 1
Mirror-
ing
Storage Configuration: Disk RAID and Disk Management
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