On Mon April 26 2010 12:29:43 Stan Hoeppner wrote: > Mark Allums put forth on 4/26/2010 12:51 PM: > > Put four drives in a RAID 1, you can suffer a loss of three drives. > > And you'll suffer pretty abysmal write performance as well.
Write performance of RAID-1 is approximately as good as a simple drive, which is good enough for many applications. > Also keep in mind that some software RAID implementations allow more than > two drives in RAID 1, most often called a "mirror set". However, I don't > know of any hardware RAID controllers that allow more than 2 drives in a > RAID 1. RAID 10 yields excellent fault tolerance and a substantial boost > to read and write performance. Anyone considering a 4 disk mirror set > should do RAID 10 instead. Some of my RAIDs are N-way RAID-1 because of the superior read performance. --Mike Bird -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201004261304.13643.mgb-deb...@yosemite.net