EasyManuals Logo

Fortinet FortiAnalyzer-100A User Manual

Fortinet FortiAnalyzer-100A
162 pages
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Page #60 background imageLoading...
Page #60 background image
FortiAnalyzer Version 3.0 MR3 Administration Guide
60 05-30003-0082-20060925
RAID levels Configure the FortiAnalyzer unit
To configure the RAID settings, go to System > Config > RAID.
The FortiAnalyzer unit support standard RAID levels linear, 0, 1 and 5. The
FortiAnalyzer-2000 and FortiAnalyzer-4000/4000A supports additional RAID level
10 (1+0), and 50 (5+0), as well as 5 +hot spare and 10 + hot spare.
Linear
A linear RAID level combines all hard disks into one large virtual disk. It is also
known as concatenation or JBOD (Just a Bunch of Disks). The total space
available in this option is the capacity of all disks used. There is very little
performance changes when using this RAID format, including any redundancy
available at this level. If any of the drives fails, the entire set of drives is unusable
until the faulty drive is replaced. All data will be lost.
RAID 0
A RAID 0 array is also referred to as striping. The FortiAnalyzer unit writes
information evenly across all hard disks. The total space available is that of all the
disks in the RAID array. There is no redundancy available. If any of the drives fail,
the data cannot be recovered. This RAID level is beneficial because it provides
better performance, since the FortiAnalyzer unit can distribute disk writing across
multiple disks.
RAID 1
A RAID 1 array is also referred to as mirroring. The FortiAnalyzer unit writes
information to one hard disk, and writes a copy (a mirror image) of all information
to all other hard disks. The total disk space available is that of only one hard disk,
as the others are solely used for mirroring. This provides redundant data storage
with no single point of failure. Should any of the hard disks fail, there are several
backup hard disks available. With a FortiAnalyzer-400 for example, if one disk
fails, there are still three other hard disks the FortiAnalyzer unit can access and
continue functioning.
RAID 5
A RAID 5 array employs striping with a parity check. The FortiAnalyzer unit writes
information evenly across all drives. Additional parity blocks are written on the
same stripes. The parity block is staggered for each stripe. The total disk space is
the total number of disks in the array, minus one disk for parity storage. For
example, on a FortiAnalyzer-400 with four hard disks, the total capacity available
is actually the total for three hard disks. RAID 5 performance is typically better with
reading than writing, although performance is degraded when one disk has failed
or is missing. RAID 5 also ensures no data loss. If a drive fails, it can be replaced
and the FortiAnalyzer unit will restore the data on the new disk using reference
information from the parity volume.
Note: RAID functionality is only available on the FortiAnalyzer-400, FortiAnalyzer-800,
FortiAnalyzer-2000 and FortiAnalyzer-4000/4000A. These units include multiple hard disks
for RAID support.
Note: This RAID level is not available on the FortiAnalyzer-2000 and
FortiAnalyzer-4000/4000A.

Table of Contents

Questions and Answers:

Question and Answer IconNeed help?

Do you have a question about the Fortinet FortiAnalyzer-100A and is the answer not in the manual?

Fortinet FortiAnalyzer-100A Specifications

General IconGeneral
BrandFortinet
ModelFortiAnalyzer-100A
CategoryMeasuring Instruments
LanguageEnglish