Vivotek NR9682-v2 64-Channel NVR (No HDD) User Manual

Page 51

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User's Manual - 51

RAID 1 Drive Groups

In RAID 1 drive groups, the RAID controller duplicates all data from one drive to a second drive

in the drive group. A RAID 1 drive group supports an even number of drives from 2 through 32

in a single span. The RAID1 drive group provides complete data redundancy, but at the cost

of doubling the required data storage capacity. The following table provides an overview of a

RAID1 drive group. The following figure provides a graphic example of a RAID1 drive group.

Uses

Use RAID 1 drive groups for small databases or any other environment that requires fault

tolerance but small capacity.

Strong points

Provides complete data redundancy.A RAID 1 drive group is ideal for any application that

requires fault tolerance and minimal capacity.

Weak points

Requires twice as many drives.

Performance is impaired during drive rebuilds.

Drives

2 through 32 (must be an even number of drives)

Segment 1

RAID 1

Segment 1

Duplicate

Segment 5

Segment 5

Duplicate

...

Segment 2

Segment 2

Duplicate

Segment 6

Segment 6

Duplicate

...

Segment 3

Segment 3

Duplicate

Segment 7

Segment 7

Duplicate

...

Segment 4

Segment 4

Duplicate

Segment 8

Segment 8

Duplicate

...

RAID 1

RAID 1

RAID 1

RAID 5 Drive Groups

A RAID 5 drive group includes disk striping at the block level and parity. Parity is the data’s

property of being odd or even, and parity checking is used to detect errors in the data. In RAID5

drive groups, the parity information is written to all drives. A RAID5 drive group is best suited for

networks that perform a lot of small input/output (I/O) transactions simultaneously.The following

table provides an overview of a RAID5 drive group. The following figure provides a graphic

example of a RAID5 drive group.

Uses

Provides high data throughput, especially for large files.

Use RAID 5 drive groups for transaction processing applications because each drive can

read and write independently.

If a drive fails, the RAID controller uses the parity drive to re-create all missing

information.Use also for online customer service that requires fault tolerance.Use for any

application that has high read request rates but random write request rates.

Strong points

Provides data redundancy, high read rates, and good performance in most environments.

Provides redundancy with lowest loss of capacity.

Weak points

Not well suited to tasks requiring lots of small writes or small block write operations.

Suffers more impact if no cache is used.
Drive performance is reduced if a drive is being rebuilt.
Environments with few processes do not perform as well because the RAID drive group

overhead is not offset by the performance gains in handling simultaneous processes.

Drives

3 through 32

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