Note: This article was originally published in 2013. Some steps, commands, or software versions may have changed. Check the current RAID documentation for the latest information.

In this step-by-step guide, you’ll learn select the best raid level configuration.

Selecting the Best RAID Level Configuration

Selecting an appropriate RAID level used to be a simple matter, but with time newer options are available and thus it becomes more difficult to select the most appropriate option. Several factors like the need for redundancy, budget, performance of read and write operations, availability of built-in hot spare and number of drives impact the final decision anyone makes. Below is a table that should help individuals better select the RAID level that is most adequate for the logical drives available on the storage space. Using your requirements for performance and reliability you can make a more educated decision on which level to chose.   RAID LevelRedundancyDisk Drive UsageRead PerformanceWrite PerformanceBuilt-in Hot-SpareMinimum Disk Drives
RAID 0No100%wwwwwwNo2
RAID 1Yes50%wwwwNo2
RAID 1EYes50%wwwwNo3
RAID 10Yes50%wwwwNo4
RAID 5Yes67 - 94%wwwwNo3
RAID 5EEYes50 - 88%wwwwYes4
RAID 50Yes67 - 94%wwwwNo6
RAID 6Yes50 - 88%wwwNo4
RAID 60Yes50 - 88%wwwNo8
In general the more hard drives you have available in the array the better the performance. However, one must be careful nowadays as with increased storage space comes higher risks. Hard drives are rated and provide a number of errors per number of reads. Obviously the more space available the more likely a read/write error is to happen. Now, the more drives you have the higher that probability of an error occurring across the array. For that reason I recommend having a professional RAID controller that is able to address this issue. I´ve used cheap integrated ones before and whenever they come across a minor error the entire array becomes un-operational and lost. Another important aspect to keep in mind is that certain RAID levels as RAID 5 and 6 use distributed parity, which means that the controller has to be constantly computing the parity information and that introduces a performance hit and utilization of the controller. Raid 1 or 10 in contrast have not such parity operations. I hope this information helps and let me know which is your favorite RAID level! I’m personally using RAID 1E vs RAID 5 and 6 for performance reasons.

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Summary

You’ve successfully learned select the best raid level configuration. If you run into any issues, double-check the prerequisites and ensure your RAID environment is properly configured.