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:Redundant Array Of Inexpensive Disks (RAID)--Technical Paper
Redundant Array Of Inexpensive Disks (RAID)--Technical Paper
May 29, 2008, 04 :30 UTC (4 Talkback[s]) (6175 reads)

(Other stories by Arvind Kumar)

[ Thanks to Falko Timme for this link. ]

"The storage capacity and data retrieval speeds of Hard Disks have increased multiple folds in last few years. However for large business organizations, which not only need to store terabytes of invaluable data but access them frequently as well. These organizations cannot afford to let their systems go offline even for a short duration of time. Moreover they cannot even think of loosing even small amount of data due to disk failure or for that matter any other reason.

"A single hard disk cannot fulfill all these requirements no matter how large is the storage capacity or how good the performance and quality of disk is. The need here arises of a system that can store large volumes of data, provides fault tolerance, scalable in terms of increasing storage capacity and above all that can be reliable..."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
GRUB vs. the Inodes: Who Needs a Bootable System, Anyway?(May 01, 2008)
Benchmarking Linux Filesystems on Software RAID 1(Apr 22, 2008)
How To Set Up Software RAID1 On A Running LVM System(Mar 24, 2008)
Four Good Choices for Your Next IDS(Mar 19, 2008)


Index Mode   |   Flat Mode   |   Thread Mode   |   Thread Flat  
  Talkback(s) Name  and Date
> 5. Read and Write Performance> 5.1 Mir ...   Mirroring read   
etienne
May 29, 2008, 09:07:12
 
Data written to disk is protected by CRC ...   Re: Mirroring read   
Dale Pontius
May 29, 2008, 15:27:49
 
 So there is no protection whatsoever fr ...   Re[2]: Mirroring read   
etienne
May 29, 2008, 16:54:08
 
My judgement might be less severe if thi ...   Discredit to HowtoForge.com   
LinuxClassicist
May 30, 2008, 14:09:08
 
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