Raid 1 Data Recovery Services California
RAID 1 creates an exact copy (or mirror) of a set of data on two or more disks.
This is useful when write performance is more important than minimizing the storage
capacity used for redundancy. This is thought to be a foolproof method of data protection,
but we commonly receive RAID 1 arrays that have failed due to:
corrupted mirrors
bad data from one drive moves to the other drive
mirror breaks, and does not allow system to boot
improper rebuild
The array can only be as big as the smallest member disk, however. A classic RAID
1 mirrored pair contains two disks, which increases reliability by a factor of two
over a single disk, but it is possible to have many more than two copies. Since
each member can be addressed independently if the other fails, reliability is a
linear multiple of the number of members. To truly get the full redundancy benefits
of RAID 1, independent disk controllers are recommended, one for each disk. Some
refer to this practice as splitting or duplexing.
When reading, both disks can be accessed independently. Like RAID 0 the average
seek time is reduced by half when randomly reading but because each disk has the
exact same data the requested sectors can always be split evenly between the disks
and the seek time remains low. The transfer rate would also be doubled. For three
disks the seek time would be a third and the transfer rate would be tripled. The
only limit is how many disks can be connected to the controller and its maximum
transfer speed. Many older IDE RAID 1 cards read from one disk in the pair, so their
read performance is that of a single disk. Some older RAID 1 implementations would
also read both disks simultaneously and compare the data to catch errors. The error
detection and correction on modern disks makes this less useful in environments
requiring normal commercial availability. When writing, the array performs like
a single disk as all mirrors must be written with the data.
RAID 1 has many administrative advantages. For instance, in some 365*24 environments,
it is possible to "Split the Mirror": declare one disk as inactive, do
a backup of that disk, and then "rebuild" the mirror. This requires that
the application support recovery from the image of data on the disk at the point
of the mirror split. This procedure is less critical in the presence of the "snapshot"
feature of some filesystems, in which some space is reserved for changes, presenting
a static point-in-time view of the filesystem. Alternatively, a set of disks can
be kept in much the same way as traditional backup tapes are.