Reading, ‘riting, and redundancy
Which of these RAID types splits data evenly across two or more disks, but does not provide any data redundancy?
Which of these RAID types splits data evenly across two or more disks, but does not provide any data redundancy?
The throughput and redundancy advantages of RAID are used in numerous computer systems. In this video, you’ll learn about RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 5, and RAID 1+0.
You need to configure a software RAID setting that will provide complete redundancy with minimum overhead if a disk failed. Which of these RAID types would be the best choice?
You need a disk array that will provide for the best read and write performance, with no need for redundancy. Which of these RAID types would fit your requirement?
Assuming the same disk array hardware, which of these reasons might be a reason to choose RAID 0 instead of RAID 1?
How can you maintain uptime, even when your hardware fails? In this video, you’ll learn about high availability, redundancy and fault tolerance, hard drive RAID technologies, and server clustering.
CompTIA Security+ SY0-301: 2.7 – Redundancy, Fault Tolerance, and High Availability Read More »
You’d like to build a server that provides redundancy in the case of a drive outage, but you also want to maximize the amount of available space on the disk array. Which of these RAID types would fit this requirement?