RAID 10 overview

RAID 10 provides high availability by combining features of RAID 0 and RAID 1.

RAID 0 increases performance by striping volume data across multiple disk drives. RAID 1 provides disk mirroring, which duplicates data between two disk drives. By combining the features of RAID 0 and RAID 1, RAID 10 provides a second optimization for fault tolerance.

RAID 10 implementation provides data mirroring from one disk drive to another disk drive. RAID 10 stripes data across half of the disk drives in the RAID 10 configuration. The other half of the array mirrors the first set of disk drives. Access to data is preserved if one disk in each mirrored pair remains available. In some cases, RAID 10 offers faster data reads and writes than RAID 6 because it is not required to manage parity. However, with half of the disk drives in the group used for data and the other half used to mirror that data, RAID 10 arrays have less capacity than RAID 6 arrays.

Note: RAID 6 is the recommended and default RAID type for all drives over 1 TB. RAID 6 and RAID 10 are the only supported RAID types for 3.84 TB Flash Tier 1 drives and 1.92 TB, 7.68 TB, and 15.36 TB Flash Tier 2 drives.