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December 1, 2001 Vol.60
 
Technical Information  

RAID: Who Needs It?

Not a bug spray? Not a sudden swift attack? RAID originally stood for Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks. Current usage often reads Redundant Array of Independent Disks (or Drives). Now, both the "I words"–independent, and, especially with IDE drives, inexpensive–are appropriate. A RAID controller manages an array of physical hard drives into a simple scheme of logical drives which the system sees.

Basics

RAID systems address one or both of two basic data storage problems: data safety, and read/write performance (speed).

First, safety. Data stored on magnetic disks is, as most of us know only too well, subject to loss. As some say, it is not a question of if your hard drive will fail, it is only a question of when. And though IDE drives have improved astonishingly in physical size (smaller is better), in capacity (larger is better), and in reliability (longer MTBF is, of course, better) since their introduction, it is still a question of when. At the simplest level, you can have two IDE drives in a RAID array, with exactly the same data on each. If either drive fails, the other takes over. Of course, in the event of a disk failure, in addition to managing the reconstruction of data, the RAID controller sends an alert, so that steps may be taken to replace the failed hardware.

Second, speed. If you have a ton of data coming in (or going out) every second, such as with streaming uncompressed, full-screen, hi-res video, with stereo sound, it is still a challenge for a hard drive to keep up. Dropouts, or worse, do happen. But, again at the simplest level, if you have two hard drives sharing the load (you could think of it as splitting the stream), they can keep up. It's another case where two heads are better than one, or (with four read/write heads in a typical IDE drive) eight are better than four.

 
 

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