AHCI and RAID on HP Compaq Elite 8000, 8100, 8200, and 8300 Business PCs - Technical White Paper
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RAID 1 with two hard drives (Mirror))  
Because it is a very cost-effective way to increase system storage reliability and a great value proposition, RAID 1 is the 
only RAID configuration that HP pre-configures for HP Elite 8000-series Business PCs. RAID 1 provides high availability 
with minimal performance impact, as well as greater reliability compared to a single hard drive configuration. 
RAID 1 has redundancy and hence is a true RAID. It more than doubles reliability because the MTBF of RAID 1 is equal to 
the MTBF of an individual drive multiplied by the number of drives (2). In other words, the probability of one hard drive 
failure on a given day is the square root of that same probability. Hypothetically, if the chance for a single hard drive 
failure is 1:2000, then the chance that both hard drives failing in RAID 1 is 1:4,000,000.  
Mirroring, segmentation, and striping have no real meaning in RAID 1. In the table and graphic, the data is arranged in 
rows for representation of different pieces of data.  
Table 4: RAID 0 with two hard drives (Mirror) 
First disk  Second disk 
Data Segment 1   Data Segment 1  
Data Segment 2   Data Segment 2  
Data Segment 3   Data Segment 3  
Data Segment 4   Data Segment 4  
Data Segment 5   Data Segment 5  
Data Segment 6   Data Segment 6  
Data Segment 7   Data Segment 7  
Data Segment 8   Data Segment 8  
In the previous table, each “Data Segment n” represents a group of data, known as a strip. In this case, each rows 
represent a stripe. This table shows how information is duplicated in both hard drives. The size of the strips is mostly 
irrelevant and not a configurable option.  
To better illustrate the concept of RAID 1 and mirroring, Figure 3 shows how a sequence of data “ABCD...” is stored in a 
RAID 1 volume. In this example, each letter represents a data segment. The graphic shows how the various pieces are 
replicated for both of the hard drives; hence, if any one member of the RAID 1 volume fails, the information is kept in the 
surviving members. After a hard drive failure, the user interface sends a notification so the failed hard drive can be 
replaced. No user information is lost in this scenario. 
Figure 3: Reliability - RAID 1 mirroring 










