Newbie RAID question

pm

Elite Member Mobile Devices
Jan 25, 2000
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I have an Intel SSD and I recently bought another. They are both the same model and size. Right now I have an Asus P8P67 motherboard with the SSD as the boot drive to Windows, and then I have a 1TB drive that I have mapped to c:\users. The BIOS has the drives set up as ACHI.

I want to install RAID0 on the two SSD's. I made a clone of the drive using Clonezilla and stuck it on the 1TB drive. I went into the BIOS and enabled RAID for the drives and then wasn't fast enough on boot and it tried to boot into Windows and then blue-screened and rebooted.

So my main question is why didn't it boot into Windows after I switched the BIOS from ACHI to RAID? Do I need to preinstall a RAID driver for Windows?
 

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
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Yes, Windows must have the RAID driver installed, if the BIOS is set to RAID mode, otherwise it cannot boot.
 

boochi

Senior member
May 21, 2011
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You will probably be a little disappointed with the performance gains with RAID0 on SSD's. The performance gains are not really noticeable as with traditional harddrives. I have ran as many as 3 in RAID0 and the performance gain was negligible.
 

BrightCandle

Diamond Member
Mar 15, 2007
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In raid 0 you also currently loose trim support, which can reduce performance during heavy write periods quite a lot.
 

pm

Elite Member Mobile Devices
Jan 25, 2000
7,419
22
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Thanks, Larry. Based on your reply, I did a bunch of googling and found one registry entry that needed to be changed, and life is good.

I didn't know about the TRIM thing. That's a bummer.

As far as performance, We had a 6 drive RAID0 Intel SSD 310 array in the lab and it scaled petty much exactly linearly with the drives. We had something like a 1.4Gb/s sequential read rate in A-SSD... I'll have to look at the screenshot we took, but we got great performance out of that RAID array. M

I found out last night that Clonezilla doesn't support firmware RAID0, so I'm still RAIDless.
 
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jhansman

Platinum Member
Feb 5, 2004
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In addition to losing TRIM, you also run the risk of losing your boot drive in RAID 0 if one of the SSDs eats it. Yes, you can image your install as insurance, but as others have pointed out, the performance gains probably do not offset the risks.
 

Emulex

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2001
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some controllers let you setup raid-1 for boot, or jbod/jbod then use the rest of the drive for raid-0.

raid-0 for boot, and raid-1 for rest also works but quite honestly raid-0 it all and backup daily (or more) - two junky sandforce drives = 500mb/s read/write (sandforce bench style) and quite honestly it is stupid fast.

I'm about to raid 4 kingston drives in raid-0 for a sql server test - i suspect it will be stupid fast on iops.

some drives have better garbage collection than others. - but for $90 for a v+ samsung 128gb - 4 of those puppies in raid-0 should be quite fun. gotta love the deals these days.