Manual

Drives and Media 83
Windows Vista
®
1
Click
Start
Computer
.
For Windows
®
XP:
Click
Start My
Computer
.
2
Right-click
Local Disk (C:)
.
3
Click
Properties
Tools
Check Now
.
NOTE: The User Account Control window may appear. If you are an
administrator on the computer, click Continue; otherwise, contact your
administrator to continue the desired action.
4
Click to check
Scan for and attempt recovery of bad sectors
, and then
click
Start
.
Working with RAID
A redundant array of independent disks (RAID) is a disk storage
configuration that increases performance or data redundancy. There are four
basic RAID levels discussed in this section.
NOTE: RAID requires multiple hard drives. The number of hard drives required
varies depending on the RAID configuration.
RAID level 0 is recommended for higher performance (faster throughput).
RAID level 1 is recommended for users who need a high level of data
integrity.
RAID level 0+1 is recommended for higher performance and data
integrity
RAID level 5 is recommended for higher performance and fault tolerance.
RAID Level 0
NOTICE: RAID level 0 provides no redundancy. Therefore, a failure of one drive
results in the loss of all data. Perform regular backups to protect your data.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Your computer may support other RAID
levels (5, 10, 50). For information about these levels, see
support.dell.com.