I'm thinking of building my self a server with a RAID 5 set up for storage and would ideally want a motherboard with the RAID chip built in. Has anyone had any experience with either an AMD or Intel compatible board with RAID 5 support?
I agree with the first point but not the second - RAID10 means the loss of half the available space, RAID5 means the loss of a maximum of a third and less as more disks are added.Anything showing Intel ICH9R will support a full software implementation of RAID 5, but I think you may be horrified how slow it is. There is a lot of data assembly/disassembly going on and without a dedicated hardware RAID controller it really does make a huge performance hit on your system.
It's also hugely space inefficient compared to RAID10 which is much faster and more robust.
Windows Home Server all the way.
Forget raid, just plug drives in and let the server do the job.
One of the best microsoft products I have ever bought !
why do you bother with RAID for storage? why not just back it all up to DVD and just have all your storage space for storage?
not trying to change your mind, just curious.
What would you do if you deleted something by mistake? Corrupt filesystem? Malicious activity?If you're not going to have any sort of DVD backup, what would you do if 2 hard drives went down?
I'm not too inclined to let WHS do that as if the OS fails, then I loose everything don't I? If I have all my storage on a RAID 5 array and my OS on a single HD not on the RAID if anything happens to the OS all the data will still be safe on the RAID 5 array?
I have raid because I can't be bothered with a full backup but don't particularly want to have to deal with disk failure.
If I loose everything it's an annoyance. Backing up to DVDs regularly is more of an annoyance. RAID is easy and hopefully reduces the chance of annoyance.
You can get RAID file servers for very little money these days. Things like the buffalo terestation or whatever it's called. They're fast, easy and network-attached. Sounds like what you want.
If you want just a RAID setup and don't care too much about transphere speed your origional suggestion is a good one.
If you have critical data on the system you need a backup solution (as has already been repeatedly noted) and DVD, tape or a second, physically seperate filestore are your main options.