Appendix F Serial Attached SCSI BIOS Configuration Utility F-35
■ Two drives RAID 0 + two drives non-RAID
■ Two drives RAID 1 + two drives non-RAID
■ Two drives RAID 0 + two drives RAID 1
■ Two drives RAID 0 + two drives RAID 0
■ Two drives RAID 1 + Two drives RAID 1
■ Three drives RAID 0 + one drive non-RAID
■ Four drives RAID 0
■ Two drives RAID 1 + one hotspare drive + one drive non-RAID
■ Four drives non-RAID
F.4.2 Creating a RAID 0 Volume
A RAID 0 volume, also referred to as Integrated Striping (IS), offers the ability to
stripe data across multiple hard disks. This can increase storage capacity and
performance by combining multiple disks into one logical volume.
Note – Use RAID 0 with caution. The only advantage of RAID 0 is to improve the
overall disk performance by striping data over several disk drives. By doing this, it
decreases reliability because the failure of any drive within the striped volume results
in a complete loss of data. In addition, any disk drive included in a RAID 0 volume
becomes non-hot-swappable.
Follow these steps to create a RAID 0 volume on an adapter that does not currently
have a volume configured.
1. In the Configuration Utility, select an adapter from the Adapter List.
2. Select the RAID Properties option.
3. When you are prompted to create either an IS volume or an IM volume, select
Create IS Volume.
The next screen shows a list of disks that can be added to a volume.
4. Move the cursor to the RAID Disk column. To add a disk to the volume, change
the “No” to “Yes” by pressing the + key, - key, or space bar.
As disks are added, the Array Size field changes to reflect the size of the new
volume. There are several limitations when creating a RAID 0 volume:
■ All disks must be SAS (with SMART support).
■ Disks must have 512-byte blocks and must not have removable media.
■ There must be at least two drives in a valid volume.