Article ID: 113933 - Last Review: October 31, 2006 - Revision: 1.1 Disk Striping And Disk Striping With Parity In Windows NTThis article was previously published under Q113933 On This PageSUMMARY
Windows NT and Windows NT Advanced Server disk striping (RAID Level 0)
creates a disk file system called a stripe set by dividing data into blocks and spreading them in a fixed order across all disks in an array. By adding data to all partitions in the set at the same rate, disk striping offers the best performance of all Windows NT disk management strategies.
Windows NT Server versions allow you to establish fault tolerant disk striping with parity (RAID Level 5), which stores parity information along with striped data on different disks in the array for redundancy. Disk striping with parity is available only with Windows NT Advanced Server, not with Windows NT. The rest of this article describes disk striping with and without parity in Windows NT and Server versions. MORE INFORMATIONDisk Striping in General--With or Without Parity
Disk Striping Without Parity
Disk Striping With Parity
| Article Translations
|

Back to the top
