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RAID 60
RAID 60
RAID 60 is a nested RAID method in which the constituent drives are organized into several identical RAID 6 logical drive sets (parity
groups). The smallest possible RAID 60 configuration has eight drives organized into two parity groups of four drives each.
For any given number of hard drives, data loss is least likely to occur when the drives are arranged into the configuration that has the
largest possible number of parity groups. For example, five parity groups of four drives are more secure than four parity groups of five
drives. However, less data can be stored on the array with the larger number of parity groups.
The number of physical drives must be exactly divisible by the number of parity groups. Therefore, the number of parity groups that
you can specify is restricted by the number of physical drives. The maximum number of parity groups possible for a particular number
of physical drives is the total number of drives divided by the minimum number of drives necessary for that RAID level (three for RAID
50, 4 for RAID 60).
A minimum of 8 drives is required.
The maximum number of drives supported for RAID 60 is 256.
All data is lost if a third drive in a parity group fails before one of the other failed drives in the parity group has finished rebuilding. A
greater percentage of array capacity is used to store redundant or parity data than with non-nested RAID methods.
This method has the following benefits:
Higher performance than for RAID 6, especially during writes.
Better fault tolerance than RAID 0, 5, 50, or 6.
Up to 2n physical drives can fail (where n is the number of parity groups) without loss of data, as long as no more than two failed
drives are in the same parity group.
RAID 60
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Summary of Contents for MR Gen10 Plus
Page 10: ...Features Features 10 ...
Page 19: ...RAID technologies RAID technologies 19 ...
Page 26: ...Striping Striping 26 ...
Page 28: ...Mirroring Mirroring 28 ...
Page 32: ...Parity Parity 32 ...
Page 45: ...Spare drives Spare drives 45 ...
Page 50: ...Transformation Transformation 50 ...
Page 51: ...Array transformations Array transformations 51 ...
Page 54: ...Logical drive transformations Logical drive transformations 54 ...
Page 58: ...Drive technology Drive technology 58 ...
Page 66: ...Security Security 66 ...
Page 68: ...Simple A Simple erase writes a pattern to the logical drive in a single pass Simple 68 ...
Page 73: ...Reliability Reliability 73 ...
Page 76: ...Performance Performance 76 ...
Page 80: ...Cache Cache 80 ...
Page 98: ...Configuration Configuration 98 ...
Page 106: ...Configuration management Configuration management 106 ...
Page 117: ...Controller management Controller management 117 ...
Page 119: ...Advanced controller management Advanced controller management 119 ...
Page 137: ...Logical drive management Logical drive management 137 ...
Page 143: ...Drive management Drive management 143 ...
Page 155: ...Maintenance Maintenance 155 ...
Page 156: ...System maintenance tools System maintenance tools 156 ...
Page 160: ...Models Models 160 ...
Page 172: ...Support and other resources Support and other resources 172 ...