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Storage Devices and RAID Configurations Flashcards
Front | Back |
External HDD | Cost-effective and portable but slower than SSD options |
External SSD | Portable with high-speed performance suitable for large file transfers |
HDD | Traditional spinning disk storage that is slower but more cost-effective for large capacities |
NAS | Network-attached storage for centralized file sharing and backups |
NVMe | High-speed storage interface designed for SSDs using PCIe lanes |
RAID 0 | Striping across multiple drives for performance but lacks redundancy |
RAID 1 | Mirroring data across drives for redundancy but halves available capacity |
RAID 10 | Combines striping and mirroring for both performance and redundancy, requiring an even number of drives |
RAID 5 | Stripes data with distributed parity for performance and redundancy but requires at least three drives |
RAID 6 | Similar to RAID 5 but uses double parity for higher fault tolerance, requiring at least four drives |
SAN | Storage area network for high-performance enterprise data access |
SAS | High-performance storage interface for enterprise environments |
SATA | Common storage interface for HDDs and SSDs with slower speeds than NVMe |
SSD | Solid-state storage with faster speeds and no moving parts compared to HDD |
Front
NVMe
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Back
High-speed storage interface designed for SSDs using PCIe lanes
Front
RAID 5
Back
Stripes data with distributed parity for performance and redundancy but requires at least three drives
Front
RAID 6
Back
Similar to RAID 5 but uses double parity for higher fault tolerance, requiring at least four drives
Front
RAID 1
Back
Mirroring data across drives for redundancy but halves available capacity
Front
SSD
Back
Solid-state storage with faster speeds and no moving parts compared to HDD
Front
SAN
Back
Storage area network for high-performance enterprise data access
Front
RAID 10
Back
Combines striping and mirroring for both performance and redundancy, requiring an even number of drives
Front
External SSD
Back
Portable with high-speed performance suitable for large file transfers
Front
HDD
Back
Traditional spinning disk storage that is slower but more cost-effective for large capacities
Front
NAS
Back
Network-attached storage for centralized file sharing and backups
Front
SATA
Back
Common storage interface for HDDs and SSDs with slower speeds than NVMe
Front
SAS
Back
High-performance storage interface for enterprise environments
Front
External HDD
Back
Cost-effective and portable but slower than SSD options
Front
RAID 0
Back
Striping across multiple drives for performance but lacks redundancy
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Explores HDD, SSD, NVMe technologies, storage interfaces (SATA, SAS), external storage types, and RAID levels (0, 1, 5, 6, 10) with their use-case advantages and disadvantages.