Important Notice: Our web hosting provider recently started charging us for additional visits, which was unexpected. In response, we're seeking donations. Depending on the situation, we may explore different monetization options for our Community and Expert Contributors. It's crucial to provide more returns for their expertise and offer more Expert Validated Answers or AI Validated Answers. Learn more about our hosting issue here.

Why use RAID?

0
Posted

Why use RAID?

0

Typically RAID is used in large file servers, transaction of application servers, where data accessibility is critical, and fault tolerance is required. Nowadays, RAID is also being used in desktop systems for CAD, multimedia editing and playback where higher transfer rates are needed. RAID Levels RAID 0: Also known as “Disk Striping”, this is technically not a RAID level since it provides no fault tolerance. Data is written in blocks across multiple drives, so one drive can be writing or reading a block while the next is seeking the next block. The advantages of striping are the higher access rate, and full utilization of the array capacity. The disadvantage is there is no fault tolerance – if one drive fails, the entire contents of the array become inaccessible.

Related Questions

What is your question?

*Sadly, we had to bring back ads too. Hopefully more targeted.