
#AMD RAID 0 INSTALLATION READONLY OR READWRITE PRO#
Then there's the question of, is it worth it? I was planning on using two 256GB Samsung 850 Pro drives, which are regarded as being decently reliable. How does CacheCade work? When there's a burst of write activity to the SSD, how long does that data remain ONLY on the SSDs without also being copied to the HDDs? If the controller flushes to the HDDs as soon as usage permits (regardless of whether it remains on the SSDs or not), then the exposure to SSD failure will be quite low for my application. AMD RAID Installer (SATA, NVMe RAID) supports the operating system/boot device included in the RAID array and standalone NVMe boot device with a separate SATA RAID storage array. I see that LSI doesn't recommend this because if either drive dies, the array goes down until the drive is replaced. However, the array will be occasionally written to for OS upgrades, installing new software to play with, browser cache, and so on. The server will be primarily read-only (Plex server), and will idle most of the time.

In the popup window, select the RAID 5 volume you want to expand and then, hit Next. I have an LSI 9267-8i on the way, along with six 3TB WD Red drives in RAID6. Mount disk/partition: In my case I use ntfs-3g -o ro /dev/da0p2. I'm building a Linux-based home fileserver.
