IDE as a RAID?
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@travisdh1 said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
That sounds like the main board does not support RAID. Most boards that support RAID of any type only enable it when AHCI is selected.
Which is worth pointing out that 99.99% of motherboards don't have RAID, on desktops. And 98% don't have it on servers. RAID on the motherboard is generally a pretty silly idea and so no one does it, it's just ridiculous. That's not where it should go. In the last eighteen years, I've seen exactly one PC model that had RAID on a desktop board, and it was a very niche HPE 5150 desktop with the AMD chipset. And it wasn't available in the preceding model, nor any that followed it. Very, very rare. And no one used it, because RAID on desktops is basically unheard of.
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Definitely no RAID available on those, they are Intel based. I'm not aware of RAID being available on an Intel platform... ever. Literally. I'm not saying it's impossible or has never happened, but it's so rare that it's completely safe to say that there is no RAID option here, given that it's based on a platform that never includes it. If these had RAID, they'd advertise the crap out of that, as it would double the cost of the device! A starter RAID card is nearly $600.
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@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
With all of the world of great RAID resources out there, how did you stumble on one from 2001 using fake terms? That thing is so out of date and not meant for IT people.
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Forked out the FakeRAID discussion to here...
https://mangolassi.it/topic/17949/discovering-fakeraid-in-the-real-world
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@scottalanmiller said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@obsolesce said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@scottalanmiller said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@obsolesce said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
I rarely come across Mobos that don't contain on-board RAID functionality. These are boards with multiple SATA connectors, not IDE, and these boards have built-in RAID capabilities.
They don't, I'd wager. 99% of boards that advertise RAID don't actually have it. That's FakeRAID, that's the scam. It's designed to trick you into thinking that there is RAID on board when their isn't.
It's super common to see boards advertise RAID, it's insanely rare for one to actually have it. That one HP dx5150 was the only exception I've found or heard rumor of in all these years.
This is from Newegg, desktop MOBOs:
Yup, zero chance those have RAID. Literally, zero.
Matrix is actually the biggest brand name in FakeRAID. The only recognized FakeRAID brand.
Nearly every gaming or whitebox board advertises that it has RAID, none do.
Only 12 boards listed in Newegg have Matrix RAID... what about the other many thousands that just say "RAID 0/1/5/10"?
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Didn't see the fork, can you move the one above this and delete this?
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@travisdh1 said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
Is there a benefit to use IDE Raid?
What is best practice for 2 Disks raided off of each other ? We use Nobilis PC's(Servers) with two 500 GB WD Blue Sata Drives, Set to Raid in our Fileservers for our Sites. How ever I am not seeing an option for Raid with the Two Drives Plugged in ( Even with new drive and an old one ).
AS I said in What are you doing Right Now: I was told to just stop and let someone else do it because It's done a different way.
I see when I go into the Bios I can set it to either AHCI ( Advanced Host Controller Interface) or IDE - But I don't know which one , It defaults to IDE.
Im not going to go over someone else's Head and keep working on it, But for my own knowledge Id like to know: Which one is better? AHCI or IDE? Is there any real Benefit to IDE Raid?
I understand it's the simplest form of Raid (According to the link) above. Just wanted to see what everyone else thought.Also, stop using junk servers. Sounds like someone is getting whitebox desktops and calling them servers. Plus that Nobilis place doesn't look very good from the minute I poked around the site. I'd much rather have an xByte.com server with a real RAID card.
I don't have a say in what the company order or what we use for our PC's that we give out to the sites.
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@obsolesce said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
Didn't see the fork, can you move the one above this and delete this?
No, once a fork is made, there is no further management options. You can just repost there.
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I just saw that IDE was a choice in the BIOS; Made the assumption it was raid. Looked up IDE and that was one of the links that came up.
I was just trying to figure out what the next step would be. on getting this PC up and going.
I didn't realize that I was looking at the wrong thing, thats why I brought it here. I figured it was outdated because I didn't hear about it, and just wanted opinions from everyone else.
I understand that Raid is Software, and IDE is hardware now, at first I thought it was a thing. . . not going to lie. . .
but again, I'm just trying to learn as much as I can so thanks everyone for helping me realize that I dont need to be using IDE- since we have Sata drives.@scottalanmiller you said it was based on OS? Well this PC runs Windows 7.
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@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
I just saw that IDE was a choice in the BIOS; Made the assumption it was raid.
That's a pretty wild assumption. That's a dangerous way to approach research.
You have a number, I assume, of rather wild, incorrect assumptions to get to there.
- That RAID would be available on a desktop (it's not.)
- That IDE would be RAID without any connection to lead you there.
- That RAID would be an alternative to other protocols.
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@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
I understand that Raid is Software, and IDE is hardware now, at first I thought it was a thing. . . not going to lie. . .
IDE is a protocol. Not hardware itself. In your PC, you can use the IDE protocol without IDE hardware. Just lowers performance.
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@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
I didn't realize that I was looking at the wrong thing, thats why I brought it here. I figured it was outdated because I didn't hear about it, and just wanted opinions from everyone else.
So the educational takeaway here should be....
Look for assumptions that were made without a solid foundation. Then back up a step or two. The question should have been in two parts...
First: What is IDE?
Second: Is RAID Valuable in a Desktop PC Being Used Like a Server -
Just in case your wondering though you can put put Raid on desktops. One of my workstations here at work is a Raid 0 with 2 SSd in it. It has an LSI card in it I believe. Its pretty fast. I save everything to network share but its been going on for about 4 years now with any failure.
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@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@scottalanmiller you said it was based on OS? Well this PC runs Windows 7.
Windows 7, like most operating systems, has RAID included by default.
https://www.howtogeek.com/howto/36504/how-to-create-a-software-raid-array-in-windows-7/
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@jmoore said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
Just in case your wondering though you can put put Raid on desktops. One of my workstations here at work is a Raid 0 with 2 SSd in it. It has an LSI card in it I believe. Its pretty fast. I save everything to network share but its been going on for about 4 years now with any failure.
Absolutely. You can use software RAID or hardware RAID, either or, on basically any machine. RAID is always an option, it's just that it basically always comes either from software or from add on hardware.
Today, essentially all operating systems include RAID. It's such a basic function, it's basically unthinkable that an OS would not include it. It's super simple for the to include and the tech hasn't changed in decades. So it really costs them nothing to do.
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@scottalanmiller said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
I didn't realize that I was looking at the wrong thing, thats why I brought it here. I figured it was outdated because I didn't hear about it, and just wanted opinions from everyone else.
So the educational takeaway here should be....
Look for assumptions that were made without a solid foundation. Then back up a step or two. The question should have been in two parts...
First: What is IDE?
Second: Is RAID Valuable in a Desktop PC Being Used Like a ServerFair Enough .
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@scottalanmiller said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@scottalanmiller you said it was based on OS? Well this PC runs Windows 7.
Windows 7, like most operating systems, has RAID included by default.
https://www.howtogeek.com/howto/36504/how-to-create-a-software-raid-array-in-windows-7/
Am working on Reimaging the PC Today, and creating Raid in Windows 7, before I load the image on it.
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@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@scottalanmiller said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@scottalanmiller you said it was based on OS? Well this PC runs Windows 7.
Windows 7, like most operating systems, has RAID included by default.
https://www.howtogeek.com/howto/36504/how-to-create-a-software-raid-array-in-windows-7/
Am working on Reimaging the PC Today, and creating Raid in Windows 7, before I load the image on it.
If you have two drives, that's the way to go. Windows RAID isn't good, but it's industry standard, well known, and doesn't tend to lose data. Unlike a lot of FakeRAID which can actually lead to data loss because it's not well audit or maintained (who patches that stuff!?)
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@scottalanmiller said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@scottalanmiller said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@wrcombs said in IDE Raid- Is there a Benefit?:
@scottalanmiller you said it was based on OS? Well this PC runs Windows 7.
Windows 7, like most operating systems, has RAID included by default.
https://www.howtogeek.com/howto/36504/how-to-create-a-software-raid-array-in-windows-7/
Am working on Reimaging the PC Today, and creating Raid in Windows 7, before I load the image on it.
If you have two drives, that's the way to go. Windows RAID isn't good, but it's industry standard, well known, and doesn't tend to lose data. Unlike a lot of FakeRAID which can actually lead to data loss because it's not well audit or maintained (who patches that stuff!?)
It is imaging right now, created the raid as 'raid 1' as i was told to do so, waiting for the image to complete.