improves upon RAID 6 performance. It also offers more protection than a single RAID level. Use RAID 60
when you need improved fault tolerance, high capacity and impressive write speeds.
A minimum of eight hard drives is required for a RAID 60 array. Since a RAID 60 array has a high number of
hard drives, the time to initialize and rebuild data is longer than a single RAID level.
RAID+Spare
A RAID+Spare array gives you a “hot-spare” that is ready to synchronize data immediately should a hard drive
fail. If a hard drive in the array fails, the data starts to synchronize with the spare. The advantage for a RAID
array with a spare is the immediacy of the replacement hard drive. However, the spare cannot be used as
storage during standard operation since its sole task is to take over should a hard drive fail.
You can replace the failed hard drive immediately and, once synchronization is complete, assign it as a new
spare.
Drive failures and synchronizing a spare hard drive
For RAID+Spare arrays, data remains intact when the minimum number of redundant hard drives fail.
However, if an additional hard drive fails before or during data synchronization with a spare hard drive, the
data in the array is lost. See the examples below.
RAIDs 1 and 5: one drive has failed and the array immediately begins to synchronize with the spare hard
drive. If a second hard drive in the RAID 5 array fails before synchronization is complete, all data in the
array is lost.
RAID 6: two hard drives have failed and the array immediately begins to synchronize the first failed hard
drive with the spare. If a third hard drive in the RAID 5 array fails before synchronization is complete, all
data in the array is lost.
Nested RAID: nested RAID levels have greater fault tolerances depending upon which of the nested RAID
arrays have hard drives that fail.
RAIDs 10 and 50: each of the nested arrays can can lose one hard drive. If one of the two nested
arrays loses two hard drives before or during the synchronization, data is lost.
40
LaCie 6big & 12big Thunderbolt 3
3/30/17