F10 mode options
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RAID 1 and RAID 1+0 (RAID 10)
In RAID 1 and RAID 1+0 (RAID 10) configurations, data is duplicated to a second drive. The usable
capacity is C x (n / 2) where C is the drive capacity with n drives in the array. A minimum of two drives is
required.
When the array contains only two physical drives, the fault-tolerance method is known as RAID 1.
When the array has more than two physical drives, drives are mirrored in pairs, and the fault-tolerance
method is known as RAID 1+0 or RAID 10. If a physical drive fails, the remaining drive in the mirrored pair
can still provide all the necessary data. Several drives in the array can fail without incurring data loss, as
long as no two failed drives belong to the same mirrored pair. The total drive count must increment by 2
drives. A minimum of four drives is required.
This method has the following benefits:
• It is useful when high performance and data protection are more important than usable capacity.
• This method has the highest write performance of any fault-tolerant configuration.