Choosing a raid level – Adaptec SAS/SATA/SCSI RAID Controllers User Manual
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Chapter 4: Getting Started
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26
Choosing a RAID Level
This section provides a brief overview of the RAID levels supported by your Adaptec RAID
controller, including the minimum and maximum number of disk drives required by each.
●
RAID 0 (Non-redundant Array)—Stripes data across multiple disk drives. Improved
performance but no redundancy (see
).
●
RAID 1 Array—Created from two disk drives where one disk drive is a mirror of the other
(the same data is stored on each disk drive). Redundancy, but reduced capacity (see
).
●
RAID 1E Array—Similar to a RAID 1 array except that data is mirrored and striped, and more
disk drives can be included (see
●
RAID 5 Array—Stripes data for improved performance and uses parity data to provide
redundancy (see
●
RAID 5EE Array—Similar to a RAID 5 array, but includes a distributed spare and must
include a minimum of four disk drives (see
●
RAID 10 Array—Built from two or more equal-sized RAID 1 arrays, stripes and mirrors
data across multiple disk drives. Redundancy and improved performance (see
●
RAID 50
1
Array—Built from multiple disk drives configured as two or more RAID 5
arrays, stripes stored data and parity data across all disk drives (see
).
●
RAID 6 Array—Similar to a RAID 5 array except that it includes two independent sets of
parity data instead of one (see
●
RAID 60
1
Array—Similar to a RAID 50 array except that it includes four independent sets
of parity data instead of two (see
Use the table on
to see how many disk drives you must connect to your RAID
controller to support the RAID level you want.
1
The Adaptec 2420SA RAID controller can support RAID 50 or RAID 60 only when expanders are used to connect more
than four disk drives.