User manual
Cobalt RaQ XTR User Manual 307
Redundant Array of Independent Disks (RAID) 
A redundant array of independent disks is a way of storing the same data in 
different places (thus, redundantly) on multiple hard disks. A RAID appears 
to the operating system to be a single virtual disk drive. 
Redundancy means that there is protection against the failure of any single 
hard disk drive. Redundant data is used by a RAID system in the event of a 
failure; this redundant data can either be a mirror copy or parity data used to 
reconstruct the actual data. 
There are a variety of different types and implementations of RAID, each 
with its own advantages and disadvantages. 
• RAID-0 combines the separate hard disk drives into one virtual disk 
drive and offers the best performance of the three options. However, the 
data on the disk drives is not redundant and the system is thus not 
fault-tolerant. This option is available on server configurations with two 
or more hard disk drives. 
• RAID-1, also known as disk mirroring, consists of a primary hard disk 
drive and a secondary hard disk drive; the secondary disk drive is an 
exact copy or “mirror image” of the primary disk drive. This option is 
only available on a configuration with two hard disk drives. 
• RAID-5 includes a rotating parity-bit array. All read and write 
operations can be overlapped. RAID-5 does not store redundant data but 
it does store the parity information which can be used to reconstruct data 
in the event of a single hard-disk-drive failure. RAID-5 requires at least 
three hard disk drives for the array. 
Although RAID-1 and RAID-5 (but not RAID-0) can protect your data in 
case of a hard-disk-drive failure, they do not protect against operator and 
administrator (human) error, or against loss due to programming bugs. 
RAID can be implemented in hardware or in software. Hardware RAID is 
always a “disk controller”, that is, a device to which one can cable up the 
hard disk drives. Software RAID is a set of kernel modules, together with 
management utilities that implement RAID purely in software, and require 
no extra hardware. 
Root name server
On the Internet, the root name server system is the manner in which an 
authoritative master list of all top-level domain names (such as .com, .net, 
.org and individual country codes) is maintained and made available. 
SCSI
See Small Computer System Interface (SCSI). 










