i assume so as you can definately use SCSI and IDE and i know for afact my new SATA dell comes with built in RAID
jbennet
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Most motherboards I've seen that support SATA will usually support RAID 0 and 1.
Assuming the Epox mobo listed in your signature is the one you have, then yes you can do raid. The spec sheet I found online for it said is supports 0, 1, 0+1. Whether or not thats for sata or just ide Im not sure.
Phaelax
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You can set up any type of RAID 1 configuration as long as your raid card supports the connections.When setting up RAID REMEMBER the secondary bios!!!
To access the secondary bios you press "ctrl" + the first letter of your chipset manufacturer(n for nvidea, i for intel etc)
The BIOS differs based on the manufacturer but you need to create an array using your two disks and then save.
IMPORTANT:If you set up a 250gb hd and a 20 gb hd on a RAID 1 configuration you will end up with....One 20 gb hard drive!!!!!!!Windows sees the RAID controller as one hard drive and anything below the Raid controller on the bus is invisible to the O.S unless you have a specialised program using a bios hook.
If your raid card doesn't have an onboard battery(most cheap ones don't)you can lose recent data in a power cut if write back caching is enabled.Best to be aware.
If you knew most of this already then yes,fire away with a Sata raid array.If most of this is news to you might I recommend visiting the drive suppliers website and searching for a RAID installation guide?
Teachingmyself
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Almost forgot,when you get you're sata RAID 1 up and running look for an app called IOMeter.It's a handy little doohickey that will show you the speed differences between one hard drive,raid and raid with read ahead and write back enabled
Teachingmyself
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Firstly forget the RAID 5 unless you want to shell out way to much money.RAID 5 is designed with a parity drive for pretty much mission critical stuff, although you can go even higher!
If the card manufacturer is MSI press "ctrl" + "m" where you would normally go into the Bios(It's during POST,most systems will prompt you in the top right).
I assume,of course, that at this stage you've installed the RAID drivers. These overlay a secondary Bios.Heres a little diag of how the raid card works -
__________
|Operating|
| System |
`````````
| ----Windows looks for hard drives
_________
|raid card| ----Raid says"here I am,one HDD.What you got 4 me?"
`````````
| |
____ ____
| | | |
|HD | |HD| ----Raid hides the drives from windows and sorts all the
| | | | ----writing itself.Without "write back caching" there will
```` ```` ----be a performance slowdown with a Raid 1 config
(Sorry about diag quality)
"Write back caching" is enabled/disabled in you're PRIMARY bios(the one you always had).With it on the Raid is again lying to windows-
Windows - "here write this to yourself(remember it thinks raid is a drive)
Raid -"Thanks I'm done,gimme more!"
What raid has done here is taken the data,stored it in it's cache(basically onboard ram) and lied saying "written,give me more"
The advantages are obvious.Based on a raid with pretty good cache space you can theoretically run two 5,400 rpm Hd's at sata speed and beyond.
The disadvantage is unless you're raid has a built in battery you lose recent data in a power cut because raid may not have finished transferring cache to hard drive.
Anyway now that you(hopefully)understand Raid you go into your raid bios.Select your two hard drives(usually done by moving from left column to right column) and select "create array".I would strongly recommend raid 1,raid 0 is far too volatile.An ideal would be raid 10 or 0+ 1 assuming you can afford the 4 hard drives and your raid card supports it.
Thats pretty much it.Save and exit.Raid will probably tell you the new drive you hooked in has degraded and start building a copy onto it which does not eat any cpu or ram.The raid does it all.Pretty cool huh?
VERY IMPORTANT: if at any stage you lose a drive and need to install a new one DO NOT INITIALISE YOUR WORKING DRIVE!EVER!
Initialising wipes the drive clean so you'll lose all the data you're setting up raid to safeguard in the first place.The same goes for when you set up the array.If it asks if you want to initialise you're current hard drive with the OS installed on it (it won't say this it will ask initialise drive 0: seagate 150gb or whatever,just know which is your important one) say NO.If it asks for your new blank hard drive or if you want to use an old HD and don't mind losing the data DO initialise it.
Raid is tricky to set up and an enormous call generator for me at work so if you have any doubts or if I havn't explained clearly enough PLEASE post another message BEFORE you try anything
Teachingmyself
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If you intend to re-install then you should ALWAYS install you're Chipset,then video and then Raid as you will have less problems if something does go wrong.
You can set up raid without a re-installation.In this case you set up an array with the new blank hd and you're system HD.Initialize the new HD and Raid will start copying an image of itself onto the new HD.While this is happening you can load windows and do whatever you like with no slowdown on the CPU or RAM.HD will be busy though,obviously
Teachingmyself
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Latest drivers are always a good idea.When installing drivers ALWAYS restart when windows asks you.This guarantees that "Last known good configuration" will work 90% of the time,even though it's a pain in the neck restarting 5 or 6 times.
Stick with the order I gave you as it's silly to install a lot of devices attached to the chipset before you tell the chipset how it's supposed to communicate with them.
If you're other hard drives are raid enabled then you will have no problems,using the same method(assuming you have a raid controller in the pc of course)
Try setting up you're new raid as you won't lose any data if it goes wrong.I'd recommend printing out this thread to have on hand if you won't have internet access when you attempt to set up your array
Good Luck =)
Teachingmyself
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Very easy,if the raid is already on the mobo just install the drivers for the raid chipset,reboot and set up exactly as I told you the first time(remember to get into Raid Bios its "ctrl" + "first letter of manufacturers name")
If there is no integrated Raid controller on the mobo just buy a raid 1 card and do the same thing.
Most integrated raids work off the actual IDE/SATA/SCSI ports on the mobo but just make sure that there isn't a seperate connection with raid written on it
REMEMBER that raid 1 mirrors your hd so for best results have 1 empty,1 with OS and files and both same capacity when you set it up on this computer
Teachingmyself
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I went through the step of starting the raid in bios and then went through the setup where it finally said healthy raid. I am doing a mirror raid. Anyway I have done the stuff needed like os cd and pushing f6 to install raid drivers like needed. It is now installing the os. My question is do I need to initialize the discs after this is all done. This is a brand new machine with a brand new install.
if everything is set up correctly, your OS should treat the raid array as a single HDDIf I ever decide to take off the raid array can it be done? Can I just shut off raid and use one of the hard drives as another hard drive? Also, if I decide to keep the raid can I partition it after the fact because I have done a raid without a partition?
that depends on the raid hardware/software. not every manufacturer supports such changes. but you can always remove one of the HDD's and use the degraded raid array with the single drive.If I create a raid with the hard disks having two partitions what do I have to do different?
nothing. as I said - the OS treats the hardware raid array as a single hard drive, the replication processes take place on a lower level
DimaYasny
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