A RAID-1 volume, or mirror, is a volume that maintains identical copies of the data in RAID-0 volumes (single-slice concatenations). After you configure a RAID-1 volume, the volume can be used just as if it were a physical slice. You can duplicate any file system, including existing file systems. You can also use a RAID-1 volume for any application, such as a database.
Using RAID-1 volumes to mirror file systems has advantages and disadvantages:
With RAID-1 volumes, data can be read from both RAID-0 volumes simultaneously (either volume can service any request), providing improved performance. If one physical disk fails, you can continue to use the mirror with no loss in performance or loss of data.
Using RAID-1 volumes requires an investment in disks. You need at least twice as much disk space as the amount of data.
Because Solaris Volume Manager software must write to all RAID-0 volumes, duplicating the data can also increase the time that is required for write requests to be written to disk.
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For More Information |
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Planning for RAID-1 volumes | |
Detailed information about RAID-1 volumes |