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Raid level 5 supports reading and writing, but writing performance is slower than raid levels 0 and 1.Raid level 5 requires a minimum of 3 drives.
the minimum number is 0
Even thought there are more than 20 different variants of RAID, they all spawn off of three main technology standards. 1.) Striped (RAID 0) 2.) Mirrored (Raid 1) 3.) Parity (Raid 3,4,5,6) From those three you can create vast complex arrays. For example; RAID 5X5 +1 is what our NAS server has it consists of 50 HDD's where this array combines all three technologies.
There are three types of RAID RAID 0 (Stripping without parity) The records are distributed among all the available HDDs. The number of the HDDs may vary from one system to the other RAID 1 (Mirroring) This uses double number of HDDs. One stores the records while an equal number of HDDs forms the backup. RAID 5 (Stripping with parity) This type of raid distributes the records in n-1 disks while maintaining 1 disk as the parity disk. assuming 4 HDDs are required RAID 0 uses all the four RAID 1 uses double RAID 5 uses 4 + 1
0 equator is the minimum degrees of latitudes
RAID 0 does not provide any fault tolerance.
HDD or RAM? I know HDD is nothing (0 bytes).
Windows XP supports spanned and striped RAID 0 volumes Hardware RAID is considered a better solution for fault tolerance than software RAID RAID 0 does not provide fault tolerance
RAID 0.
The range of a single number is 0.The mode, median, maximum and minimum of a single number is the number.