simple, visual, intuitive, great voice and oratory. This video was super useful for understanding RAID configurations for my Computer's Architecture exam tomorrow.
Is the diagram shown to explain RAID 0 correct? See the diagram at 1:12 - It is showing that the data blocks are mirrored i.e Block 1 is in both Disk 1 and Disk2. I thought RAID 0 does not mirror the content but instead spreads the content across disks.
The maximum number of drives in a RAID 5 set is in theory unlimited (and not 16 disk as you mentioned), although your storage array is likely to have built-in limits.
@@it-made-easy6498 yeah I’m an old guy and I’ve been around a long time but that’s the first meaning, for that acronym that comes to mind. Either way, “independent“ makes sense as well. 🤷♂️
Yes, it is possible to set up a RAID 10 array as a separate RAID for data storage with an SSD as the main drive. To set up a RAID 10 array as a separate RAID for data storage with an SSD as the main drive, you will need a hardware RAID controller and at least four physical drives. You can use the SSD as the main drive and three hard drives for data storage, or you can use two SSDs as the main drives and two hard drives for data storage. To create the RAID 10 array, do these things: -Install the hardware RAID controller in your system and connect the drives to it. Configure the RAID controller to create a new RAID 10 array. -Select the drives that you want to include in the array and specify the stripe size. -Create the RAID 10 array and wait for it to finish building. -Once the RAID 10 array is created, you can partition and format it as a single logical drive and use it for data storage.
@@it-made-easy6498 Thanks! I have an Asus X370 Prime motherboard that includes the RAID driver within the BIOS, so I don't think need an additional controller. I've seen it before with other ASUS BIOS's, but never ventured there. The minimum is 4 disks for 10, right? What I'll be doing is the SSD + 4. I get that losing the 2 wrong pairs can cause you to lose all of your data. Can't I increase the disks to something like 6 or 8 to remedy that risk?
so, looks like Raid 6 and 10 are the same as capacity still lost half. But Raid 10 good for Higher server like company. for home use like me, I needed backup data of family pictures and video. should I choose Raid 5 or 6 ? If one of the hard drive fail I still can recover the data. Budget is low. If I go with Raid 5. and the storage space have 5, can I later put in 2 more? or this would not work with raid 5 ? Thanks Now, If I setup raid 6, use 4 hard drive. 5th space is a waste right? so just buy 4 rack/case only? how about I saw some guy on youtube turn his old mid case into a Raid storage? I have an old desktop that ran on window xp or so. Can I use the mother board and run it Raid 6? or The Raid motherboard is different? I understand that from my labtop can not connect to the 2nd pc to access data. is there a video or instruction about this? Thanks a lot guys....
Both RAID 6 and RAID 10 provide fault tolerance by allowing multiple drive failures without data loss. RAID 6 offers higher usable capacity compared to RAID 10, as it uses parity for redundancy instead of mirroring. However, RAID 10 generally offers better performance due to striping. Ultimately, the choice between RAID 6 and RAID 10 depends on your specific requirements, including the desired balance between capacity, performance, and fault tolerance. It is recommended to consult with a storage expert or IT professional who can assess your needs and help determine the best RAID configuration for your specific environment.
I had a question about RAID in 2022. I have an NVMe (2Tb) and a SATA SSD (1Tb) and access to HDDs for high capacity, slow, redundant storage. Would I see any improvement by setting up RAID in 2022 regarding file transferring an copying? If so what RAID configuration would be best for performance with what I have access to?
Great content sir, but I want to ask if I could use RAID 10 in a way that the mirrored data isn't strips so I could optimize 2 of my disks to be 2 mask of RAID 0 of 4 disks? Which is similar to | A. | | A. | | B. | | C. | | B. | | D. | | E. | | F. | | C. | | D. | | E. | | F. | Can I make it work like that?
Thank you for this. One question as a Not Native English person. I do not understand what you meant at raid 5 with "Drive failures have an effect on throughout". Can you explain what you meant?
So lets say for example I have 60 20tb Hard drives for a server; but my OS is running on an Nvme; What said for this should I consider? I want to get the full amount; but don't want important data lost; and want to be able to quick hot swap everything right away
Both RAID 6 and RAID 10 provide fault tolerance by allowing multiple drive failures without data loss. RAID 6 offers higher usable capacity compared to RAID 10, as it uses parity for redundancy instead of mirroring. However, RAID 10 generally offers better performance due to striping. Ultimately, the choice between RAID 6 and RAID 10 depends on your specific requirements, including the desired balance between capacity, performance, and fault tolerance.
I never understood the RAID storage until now. Thank you very much!!
Thanks!
relaxing and simple, didn't even feel like comptia im, thank you for the simplicity
Thanks! our goal is to make the learning easy!
Probably the best explanation I have seen for RAID configurations. Thanks!
Thanks!
Great explanation! You have no idea how helpful it is. Please continue in that way!
Thanks! our goal is to make the learning easy!
simple, visual, intuitive, great voice and oratory. This video was super useful for understanding RAID configurations for my Computer's Architecture exam tomorrow.
Thank you! for your feedback, our goal is to make learning easy.
Informative, simply put, well explained, I really love the channel. Keep up with the good work. Well done!
Thanks!
@@it-made-easy6498is it possible to have raid 1 with 2 raid 0 drives & 1 drive:
Raid 1
Raid 0 1tb total
500gb ssd
500gb ssd
1tb hdd
its very better video of RAID storage, you explained everything but pls explain in definition also... Thanks
Very informative and provides the complete Pros and Cons abt RAID. Thank you so much. Really helpful video.
Thank You!
Very helpful! I had difficulty understanding in my textbook, but could understand thanks to your explanation
thanks!
Thanks a lot I have not seen such easy way to understand the RAID
Thanks for the love and support
Excellent explanation, very easy to understand, you truly make easy to understand IT concepts
So amazingly explained. Please make a video on SAN
Thanks!
Awesome explanation, understand it more than ever, gunu keep watching until it's engraved in my head
Thanks!
Thought I was on Alternate History Hub for a second. Then I realized it's voice generated.
thanks!
Easy to understand, explained well, excellent!
thanks!
Why do channels that provide great content insist on crappy cheesy background music. Other than that, great !!!!!
Thanks! will take that as a compliment!
Please do !@@it-made-easy6498
Perhaps a lower volume of the music vs voice would make it alright.
It's an educational video. Absolutely no music required at all.@@FiddlerOnTheRoof2024
It's not that deep man
Thanks for your nice arrangement video for all types of RAID Array
This was so informative, why is this channel so small?
I'm growing the channel, you will see more videos soon
@@it-made-easy6498 .any use today for raid 100?
u mean 10?@@gerald4027
Very relax, very informative
Thanks
i like the explanation, ver clear, keep uploading more :)
Thanks :)
RAID 0 picture is wrong @ 1:07, it's showing RAID 1 configuration.
I hope you learned from the video
Thank you for your detailed explanation it was very helpful
Is the diagram shown to explain RAID 0 correct? See the diagram at 1:12 - It is showing that the data blocks are mirrored i.e Block 1 is in both Disk 1 and Disk2.
I thought RAID 0 does not mirror the content but instead spreads the content across disks.
Thanks!
The maximum number of drives in a RAID 5 set is in theory unlimited (and not 16 disk as you mentioned), although your storage array is likely to have built-in limits.
The use case for an average use, 16 disk is fine :)
In one of the slide, the word mentioned was throghout, whereas it should be throughput
Awesome. Sooooo helpful!
thank you for your explain 🙏🤝🤝
Thank!
Thanks for the video!
Thanks!
This guy is a legend
Thanks!
what if i dont want any performance boost and I disable raid what happened after that reply please
Really great video!!!
Great Work Bro
Thanks bro!
Thanks for your video. Do you have video for RAID 50 vs RAID 60?. Thanks in advance
A like for video like this isnt enough
Thanks!
Nice. Very clear.
Nice animated explanation
Good info!
thanks!
Originally the acronym RAID stood for “Redundant Array of Inexpensive Discs”, not “Independent”.
thanks!
@@it-made-easy6498 yeah I’m an old guy and I’ve been around a long time but that’s the first meaning, for that acronym that comes to mind. Either way, “independent“ makes sense as well. 🤷♂️
Which RAID is usefully for hosting a video game on a server??
Raid 10 it is then. The bios I have seems to offer that. Can I still set it up with an SSD as a main drive and the data storage as a separate raid?
Yes, it is possible to set up a RAID 10 array as a separate RAID for data storage with an SSD as the main drive.
To set up a RAID 10 array as a separate RAID for data storage with an SSD as the main drive, you will need a hardware RAID controller and at least four physical drives. You can use the SSD as the main drive and three hard drives for data storage, or you can use two SSDs as the main drives and two hard drives for data storage.
To create the RAID 10 array, do these things:
-Install the hardware RAID controller in your system and connect the drives to it.
Configure the RAID controller to create a new RAID 10 array.
-Select the drives that you want to include in the array and specify the stripe size.
-Create the RAID 10 array and wait for it to finish building.
-Once the RAID 10 array is created, you can partition and format it as a single logical drive and use it for data storage.
@@it-made-easy6498 Thanks!
I have an Asus X370 Prime motherboard that includes the RAID driver within the BIOS, so I don't think need an additional controller. I've seen it before with other ASUS BIOS's, but never ventured there. The minimum is 4 disks for 10, right? What I'll be doing is the SSD + 4. I get that losing the 2 wrong pairs can cause you to lose all of your data. Can't I increase the disks to something like 6 or 8 to remedy that risk?
Great video😊
Thanks!
thanka a lot, that was well explained 🌹
Thanks!
very good video regarding rRAID, do you have any PPT file for this lecture.
Hi, I do not have a ppt for this video
very helpful thanks
thanks!
please make similar videos
Thanks!
Fantastic video, thanks so much !
Thanks!!
so, looks like Raid 6 and 10 are the same as capacity still lost half. But Raid 10 good for Higher server like company. for home use like me, I needed backup data of family pictures and video. should I choose Raid 5 or 6 ? If one of the hard drive fail I still can recover the data. Budget is low. If I go with Raid 5. and the storage space have 5, can I later put in 2 more? or this would not work with raid 5 ? Thanks
Now, If I setup raid 6, use 4 hard drive. 5th space is a waste right? so just buy 4 rack/case only? how about I saw some guy on youtube turn his old mid case into a Raid storage? I have an old desktop that ran on window xp or so. Can I use the mother board and run it Raid 6? or The Raid motherboard is different? I understand that from my labtop can not connect to the 2nd pc to access data. is there a video or instruction about this? Thanks a lot guys....
Both RAID 6 and RAID 10 provide fault tolerance by allowing multiple drive failures without data loss. RAID 6 offers higher usable capacity compared to RAID 10, as it uses parity for redundancy instead of mirroring. However, RAID 10 generally offers better performance due to striping.
Ultimately, the choice between RAID 6 and RAID 10 depends on your specific requirements, including the desired balance between capacity, performance, and fault tolerance. It is recommended to consult with a storage expert or IT professional who can assess your needs and help determine the best RAID configuration for your specific environment.
Very nice
Yes plz drop some more
brilliant.
I had a question about RAID in 2022. I have an NVMe (2Tb) and a SATA SSD (1Tb) and access to HDDs for high capacity, slow, redundant storage. Would I see any improvement by setting up RAID in 2022 regarding file transferring an copying? If so what RAID configuration would be best for performance with what I have access to?
SSD for OS, Nvme for games/apps, HDDs in raid 0 as scratch disk
HI bro nice vidoe
could pls explain like interview question answer, pls
thanks for the feedback!
Can u pls explain interview questions
So what is the best solution for web hosting?
Great content sir, but I want to ask if I could use RAID 10 in a way that the mirrored data isn't strips so I could optimize 2 of my disks to be 2 mask of RAID 0 of 4 disks?
Which is similar to
| A. | | A. | | B. | | C. |
| B. | | D. | | E. | | F. |
| C. |
| D. |
| E. |
| F. |
Can I make it work like that?
great question sir, I will have to look into it :)
🎉❤
Thank you for this. One question as a Not Native English person. I do not understand what you meant at raid 5 with "Drive failures have an effect on throughout". Can you explain what you meant?
I think he's saying that while it can handle a disk failing, it will impact its performance when a disk fails.
@@alisa9040 Thank you Alisa. I understand now. The performance will get back to normal when you replace the failing disk, doesn't it?
Great video but would have been better without the music
Thank!
isn't the picture of RAID 0 is confused ? ;)
We put in the best depiction of RAID 0
Thanks
Thanks to you too for liking the video!
i want a raid where the raid 0 array is mirrored into one bigger size HDD like 2x 2TB in raid 0 auto mirror to 4TB HDD as backup
thanks!
you can hotswap on raid 1
thanks!
Another downside of RAID10 is that you cannot have uneven number of disks.. But who cares really, haha..
😮
Thanks!
Good presentation. The background music is unnecessary. and unproductive..
What about raid 100?
Raid 100 is RAID 10+0, is a stripe of RAID 10s.
Nice video, just this fucking music - WTF is wrong with just some voice over. ?
the background music is not needed, just making it harder to concentrate to what the guy is talking about.
So lets say for example I have 60 20tb Hard drives for a server; but my OS is running on an Nvme; What said for this should I consider? I want to get the full amount; but don't want important data lost; and want to be able to quick hot swap everything right away
Both RAID 6 and RAID 10 provide fault tolerance by allowing multiple drive failures without data loss. RAID 6 offers higher usable capacity compared to RAID 10, as it uses parity for redundancy instead of mirroring. However, RAID 10 generally offers better performance due to striping.
Ultimately, the choice between RAID 6 and RAID 10 depends on your specific requirements, including the desired balance between capacity, performance, and fault tolerance.