HP ProLiant DL100 G2 Data Protection Storage Server administration guide (June 2006)

The table below summarizes the important features of the different kinds of RAID suppor ted by the
Smart Array controllers. The decision chart in the following table can help determine which option is
best for different situations.
Table 10 Summary of RAID methods
RAID 0
Striping
(no fault
tolerance)
RAID 1+0
Mirroring
RAID 5
Distributed
Data
Guarding
RAID ADG
Maximum number of
hard drives
N/A N/A
14
Storage system
dependent
Tolerant of single hard
drive failur
e?
No
Yes Yes Yes
Tolerant of multiple
simultaneous hard drive
failures?
No
If the failed
drives are not
mirrored to each
other
No
Yes(twodrivescanfail)
Online spares
Further protection against data loss can be achieved by assigning an online spare (or hot spare) to any
conguration except RAID 0. This hard drive contains no data and is contained within the same storage
subsystem as the other drives in the array. When a hard drive in the array fails, the controller ca n then
automatically rebuild information that was originally on the failed drive onto the online spare. This quickly
restores the system to full RAID level fault tolerance protection. However, unless RAI D Advanced Data
Guarding (ADG) is being used, which can support t wo drive failures in a n array, in the unlikely event that
a third drive in the array should fail while data is being rewritten to the spare, the logical drive still fails.
Logical storage elements
Logical storage elem ents consist of those co mponents that translate the physical storage elements to le
system
elements. The storage server uses the Window Disk Management utility to m ana ge the various
types o
f disks presented to the le system. There are two types of LUN presentation: basic disk and
dynamic disk. Each of these types of disk has special features that enable different types of management.
Logical dri ves (L UNs)
While an array is a physical grouping of hard drives, a logical drive consists of components that translate
physical storage elements into le system elements.
It is important to note that a LUN may extend over (span) all physical drives within a storage controller
subsystem, but ca nnot span multiple storage controller s ubsystems.
L4
L5
L3
A1
L1
L2
A2
g
l0045
Figure 15 Two arrays (A1, A2) and ve logical drives (L1 through L5) spread over
ve p hysical drives
38 Storage management overview