An introduction to raid, Configuring raid with intel rste – Lenovo ThinkStation P920 Tower Workstation User Manual

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• Intel Virtual RAID on CPU configuration utility

An Introduction to RAID

RAID is a technology that provides increased storage functions and reliability through redundancy.

When a group of independent physical storage drives is set up to use RAID technology, they are in a RAID
array. This array distributes data across multiple storage drives, but the array appears to the host computer
as one single storage unit. Creating and using RAID arrays provides high performance, such as the expedited
I/O performance, because several drives can be accessed simultaneously.

RAID drive groups configured according to certain RAID levels also improve data storage reliability and fault
tolerance compared with single-drive storage systems. Data loss resulting from a drive failure can be
prevented by reconstructing missing data from the remaining drives.

Note:

For RAID 0, the missing data resulting from a drive failure cannot be reconstructed.

Configuring RAID with Intel RSTe

If your computer comes with the Intel RSTe configuration utility, you can follow the sections below to
configure RAID with Intel RSTe.

Storage drive requirements for RAID levels

Your computer supports the following RAID levels:

• RAID 0: striped disk array

– Consists of at least two SATA storage drives

– Supported strip size: 4 KB, 8 KB, 16 KB, 32 KB, 64 KB, or 128 KB

– Better performance without fault tolerance

• RAID 1: mirrored disk array

– Consists of two SATA storage drives

– Improved reading performance and 100% redundancy

• RAID 10: striped and mirrored disk array (a combination of RAID 0 and RAID 1)

– Consists of four SATA storage drives

– Supported strip size: 4 KB, 8 KB, 16 KB, 32 KB, or 64 KB

• RAID 5: block-level striped disk array with distributed parity

– Consists of at least three SATA storage drives

– Supported strip size: 16 KB, 32 KB, 64 KB, or 128 KB

– Better performance and fault tolerance

Creating a RAID volume

Attention:

All the existing data stored on the selected drives will be erased while the RAID volume is being

created.

To create a RAID volume, do the following:

1. Enable

RAID

by doing the following:

a. Start the Setup Utility program. See “Starting the Setup Utility program” on page 35.

b. Select

Devices

PCH SATA Configuration

and press Enter.

c. Select

Configure SATA as

and press Enter. Then, select

RAID

and press Enter.

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P920 User Guide

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