Gary Dale a écrit : > On 05/12/14 03:35 PM, Pascal Hambourg wrote: >> > You can think of the RAID algorithms as parity checks. A mirror is even > parity.
This point of view is a bit twisted, but I can understand and won't argue. > While the disks are not physically assigned to be data or > parity, you can recreate a failed RAID 5 disk by recalculating the > parity based on the surviving disks. Not only the parity but also the missing data. >> Linux can use a special RAID 10 mode (mirror+stripe) with two or three >> disks. > > If you have different sized disks, yes. Why ? Linux RAID, as most RAID types, uses disks of the same size. > The more usual case is to use > similar disks. If one disk is not striped, you lose some of the > performance improvement. RAID 10 with two disks makes little sense. Linux RAID 10 allows striping even on two disks ("far" mode). >>> with 6 disks, RAID 6 will give you double the capacity of 4 disks >>> or get you immunity to 3 disks failing. >> >> RAID 6 can survive 2 disk failures regarless of the number of disks in >> the array. >> > You misread the sentence. You can run RAID with any number of parity > disks by tweaking the algorithms. Most people don't bother using more > than 2 parity disks but there is no theoretical reason why you couldn't, > to get as much safety as desired. Misread ? You mentionned RAID6. RAID 6 is a standard RAID level consisting of block-level striping with double distributed parity, providing fault tolerance up to 2 failed drives. Not 3. Of course you can define any algorithm you like, but if your custom RAID has triple parity, then it's not RAID 6. > Prior to being able to boot to an > mdadm RAID 5 array, I regularly had 3 to 5 disk RAID 1 /boot partitions > - why not use the disks since they are already there and it keeps the > partitioning the same across the drives. Of course. RAID 1 as a standard level is not limited to 2 mirrored disks. It can have any number. > RAID 6 can be considered a tweaked RAID 5 and RAID 5 can be considered a > tweaked RAID 1. Going this way, anything can be considered a tweaked anything else, if you tweak enough... -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/5484419e.5050...@plouf.fr.eu.org