Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 18th Sep 2009 13:40 UTC, submitted by Robert Escue
Hardware, Embedded Systems This is an article which discusses the increase in storage capacity while performance and hard error rates have not improved significantly in years, and what this means for protecting data in large storage systems. "The concept of parity-based RAID (levels 3, 5 and 6) is now pretty old in technological terms, and the technology's limitations will become pretty clear in the not-too-distant future â€" and are probably obvious to some users already. In my opinion, RAID-6 is a reliability Band Aid for RAID-5, and going from one parity drive to two is simply delaying the inevitable."
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Did I miss something?
by Earl Colby pottinger on Fri 18th Sep 2009 18:20 UTC
Earl Colby pottinger
Member since:
2005-07-06

I thought modern raid systems used error correcting codes, which means even random bad bits did not irreversible damage the data if there was a drive failure.

What am I missing?

PS. My days of studying raid-systems was over a decade ago.