A redundant array of independent (or inexpensive) disks (RAID) is a collection of physical drives pooled together using virtualization technology to create one or more logical units for the purpose of ...
Hi everyone<BR><BR>A quick question... sure someone will kick this into touch pretty quickly<BR>I've been looking at all sorts of different RAID levels and I've not found any that match what I'm ...
RAID in its several forms provides the backbone for most of our high availability, high performance storage. RAID devices have been with us since the late-1980s, and by now are so much a part of our ...
I do have a fair grasp of this issue, but I figured I'd ask here to brainstorm a bit. I have this server:<br><br>4-way P3-700 Xeon<br>5.5 GB RAM<br>6x 9 GB 10K U2W SCSI HDDs<br>Hardware RAID (0, 1, 10 ...
Whether you’re a newcomer to the home lab ecosystem or a data hoarder with many years under the belt, you’ve probably heard about RAID levels. After all, RAID, or Redundant Array of Independent (or ...
In recent time, RAID technology has been put into service in almost every application, such as desktops, servers, laptops, storage devices, and environments that require a large number of hard disk ...