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RAID Technology

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... to proper track lowering sustained performance Very limited scalability at a very high inherent cost Disadvantages JBOD Just a Bunch of Disks ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: RAID Technology


1
RAID Technology
By Chuck Barbeau
2
What is RAID?
  • Redundant Array of Independent Disks
  • RAID is a great system for increasing speed and
    availability of data.
  • Used for Data Protection

3
Timeline of RAID Technology
  • 1956 IBM officially announces the RAMAC 305, the
    first hard disk system, which holds 5MB of data.
  • 1961 Ampex develops helical scanning video
    recording, which will later be adapted for
    high-capacity tape backup.
  • 1973 IBMs sealed Winchester hard disks become
    the standard design for disk drives.
  • 1979 Al Shugart and Finis Conner launch Seagate
    Technology to produce hard disk drives for
    desktop computers.
  • 1988 David A. Patterson leads a team that
    defines RAID standards for improved performance,
    reliability and scalability.

4
Timeline of RAID Technology
  • 1956 IBM officially announces the RAMAC 305, the
    first hard disk system, which holds 5MB of data.
  • 1961 Ampex develops helical scanning video
    recording, which will later be adapted for
    high-capacity tape backup.
  • 1973 IBMs sealed Winchester hard disks become
    the standard design for disk drives.
  • 1979 Al Shugart and Finis Conner launch Seagate
    Technology to produce hard disk drives for
    desktop computers.
  • 1988 David A. Patterson leads a team that
    defines RAID standards for improved performance,
    reliability and scalability.

5
Advantages of RAID
  • Affordable alternative to mass storage
  • Cost/Megabyte is dropping.
  • Smaller drives make this possible.
  • High output and reliability
  • High I/O rates, less power/megabyte.

6
Why Use RAID?
  • RAID devices can act as a single drive.
  • Allows simultaneous read/write.
  • Overall increase in I/O performance.
  • Provides data redundancy.

7
RAID Level 0Striping
8
Advantages Disadvantages
  • Advantages
  • RAID 0 offers great performance, both in read and
    write operations.
  • All storage capacity is used, there is no disk
    overhead.
  • The technology is easy to implement.
  • Disadvantages
  • RAID 0 is not fault-tolerant. If one disk fails,
    all data in the RAID 0 array are lost. It should
    not be used on critical systems.

9
RAID Level 1Mirrored
10
Advantages Disadvantages
  • Advantages
  • RAID 1 offers excellent read speed and a
    write-speed that is comparable to that of a
    single disk.
  • In case a disk fails, data do not have to be
    rebuild, they just have to be copied to the
    replacement disk.
  • RAID 1 is a very simple technology.
  • Disadvantages
  • The main disadvantage is that the effective
    storage capacity is only half of the total disk
    capacity because all data get written twice.

11
RAID Level 3Byte level Striping Parity
12
Advantages Disadvantages
  • Advantages
  • RAID-3 provides high throughput (both read and
    write) for large data transfers.
  • Disk failures do not significantly slow down
    throughput.
  • Disadvantages
  • This technology is fairly complex and too
    resource intensive to be done in software.
  • Performance is slower for random, small I/O
    operations.

13
RAID Level 5Block Level Striping with Parity
14
Advantages Disadvantages
  • Advantages
  • Read data transactions are very fast while write
    data transaction are somewhat slower (due to the
    parity that has to be calculated).
  • Disadvantages
  • Disk failures have an effect on throughput,
    although this is still acceptable.
  • Like RAID 3, this is complex technology.

15
RAID 10 RAID 0 RAID 1
16
RAID 10 Very High Reliability combined with High
Performance
  • Characteristics/Advantages
  • RAID 10 is implemented as a striped array whose
    segments are RAID 1 arrays
  • RAID 10 has the same fault tolerance as RAID
    level 1
  • High I/O rates are achieved by striping RAID 1
    segments
  • Under certain circumstances, RAID 10 array can
    sustain multiple simultaneous drive failures
  • Excellent solution for sites who would have
    otherwise gone with RAID 1 but need some
    additional performance boost

17
Disadvantages
  • Very expensive / High overhead
  • All drives must move in parallel to proper track
    lowering sustained performance
  • Very limited scalability at a very high inherent
    cost

18
JBOD Just a Bunch of Disks (drives)
  • Tacks one disk onto the end of another without
    striping. There's minimal performance
    improvement, the only significant gain is that
    you have one big volume instead of a bunch of
    little ones.

19
RAID Manufacturers
  • Comix International
  • Sea Storage
  • Norco

20
Sources
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAID
  • http//www.webopedia.com/TERM/R/RAID.html
  • http//www.computerworld.com/s/article/87093/The_S
    tory_So_Far
  • http//www.prepressure.com/library/technology/raid
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