Doesn't RAID 5 give a little more expandability? If in the future he wants to add another drive on a RAID 5, he can. I don't think he could do it with RAID1 or 1+0. Craig White wrote: > On Mon, 2009-01-19 at 07:30 -0700, Mark Phillips wrote: > >> Eric >> >> Thanks for the summary, and thank-you to everyone for their ideas. >> >> Based on NewEgg prices, here is some more information: >> >> >> Option A >> Single Disk IDE Drive - 500 GB and backups, keep OS on existing drive >> = $69.99 >> Use existing controller and just add another drive. No redundancy >> >> >> Option B >> RAID10 with 500 GB backup capacity and redundancy, keep OS on existing >> drive = $179.97 >> 2 500 GB SATA2 Drives, new SATA2 controller >> >> >> Option C >> RAID10 with 750 GB backup capacity and redundancy, keep OS on existing >> drive = $239.97 >> Two 750 GB SATA2 Drives, new SATA2 controller >> >> >> Option D >> RAID5 with 1,000 GB backup capacity and redundancy, keep OS on >> existing drive = $239.97 >> Three 500 GB SATA2 Drives, new SATA2 controller >> >> >> I am leaning towards Option C based on less power consumption with >> fewer drives. However, I have to rethink my budget... >> >> After some more reading, I am a little confused about the debate >> between RAID5 and RIAD10. I am interested in the group's opinions on >> which is better - RAID 5 or RAID 10 and why? What experiences have you >> had regarding installation, maintenance, and fixing problems? I am >> running Debian testing. >> > ---- > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAID > > RAID 10 is FAR better performance than RAID 5 - so does RAID 1. > > RAID 10 in theory, requires 4 drives minimum. Think of RAID 10 as RAID 1 > + RAID 0 (hence the 10) > > RAID 5 in theory, requires 3 drives minimum. > > RAID 0 = drives striped together to appear as a single drive. Logical > sectors are interleaved between the drives > > RAID 1 = drives that mirror each other. > > Thus a RAID 10 would have at least 2 drives striped together in RAID 0, > mirrored (RAID 1) by the same number of drives striped together. > > While you might be able to create RAID 10 with only 2 drives on some > hardware, I can't think of any benefit for this over RAID 1 as the 'RAID > 0' part of the array, being only single drives doesn't make much sense > and just complicates things more. > > Don't know what RAID controllers you are looking at on NewEgg but be > careful of fake RAID controllers as they are cheap and common but they > don't work well...especially with Linux. > > Craig > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss