R&D: Investigating Reliability in 3 RAIDs and Effect of Ordering Replicas on Disks
Effect of redundancy's type and blocks' arrangement on system's reliability investigated
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on May 19, 2021 at 2:31 pmarXiv.org has published an article written by Leila Namvari-Tazehkand, and Saeid Pashazadeh, Faculty of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Tabriz, Tabriz,East Azerbaijan, Iran.
Abstract: “One of the most important parts of cloud computing is storage devices, and Redundant Array of Independent Disks (RAID) systems are well known and frequently used storage devices. With the increasing production of data in cloud environments, we need high-reliable storage, given the importance of data. RAID system’s reliability analysis is of particular significance in the area of cloud storage. Generally, data redundancy is used to create fault tolerance and increases the reliability of storage. This study has considered three examples of the simple RAID storage models and analyzed their reliability. All of which have a replication factor of two and have the same number of disks and reliabilities. The only difference is the model that they used for generating the redundancy. To compare these three models’ reliability, we examined the degree of fault tolerance (FT) and calculated the models’ reliability using the reliability block diagram (RBD). In this paper, the effect of redundancy’s type and the blocks’ arrangement on the system’s reliability was investigated. “