Apple Xsan 1.4 User Manual
Page 45

Chapter 2
Setting Up a Storage Area Network
45
Xserve RAID supports all popular RAID levels. Each RAID scheme offers a different
balance of performance, data protection, and storage efficiency, as summarized in the
following table.
RAID 10, 30, and 50 schemes assume the use of AppleRAID software striping and aren’t
appropriate for use with Xsan, which performs its own striping. For more help choosing
RAID schemes for your arrays, see the Xserve RAID User’s Guide or the Xserve RAID
Technology Overview (at www.apple.com/server/documentation/).
Deciding on the Number of Volumes
A volume is the largest unit of shared storage on the SAN. If your users need shared
access to files, you should store those files on the same volume. This makes it
unnecessary for them to pass copies of the files among themselves.
On the other hand, if security is critical, one way to control client access is to create
separate volumes and mount only the authorized volume on each client.
RAID level
Storage
efficiency
Read
performance
Write
performance
Data
redundancy
RAID 0
Highest
Very High
Highest
No
RAID 1
Low
High
Medium
Yes
RAID 3
High to very high
Medium
Medium
Yes
RAID 5
High to very high
High
High
Yes
RAID 0+1
Low
High
High
Yes