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Working with RAID 6 Presets


R‑Studio for Linux allows you to create and process RAID 6 layouts. You may use either presets for several RAID 6 layouts, or use your own custom ones.

R‑Studio for Linux provides presets for the following RAID 6 layouts:

Reed-Solomon

Left Synchronous (standard),

Left Asynchronous (continuous),

Right Synchronous

Right Asynchronous

In addition you may create your own RAID 6 configurations.

Creating a RAID 6 object from a preset:

We will use the Reed-Solomon ( Left Synchronous (standard) ) preset as an example.

To create a RAID 6 object

1 Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Block RAID

or select the Create Virtual Block RAID on the Create menu

> A Virtual Block RAID object will appear on the Drives panel
2 Select RAID 6/Reed-Solomon on the RAID type
3 Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
3 Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab

Click to expand/collapse Other ways to add objects

You may either make R‑Studio for Linux to process your changes immediately or wait until you finish editing the RAID layout. Select or clear the Apply changes immediately checkbox on the Parents tab. Click the Apply button to apply the changes when are you through.

Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original volume set. If this order is incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.

Object control buttons

The RAID block size and Offset (in sectors) parameters must be set the same as for the original volume set.

You also need to specify Blocks order ( Left Synchronous (standard) for our case ) for virtual RAID 6. You may select it on the Blocks order drop-down or context menu.

If the those parameters are not correct, data on the parents will not be damaged, but they cannot be recovered.

Note: You may check how correctly you have reconstructed the original volume set or RAID. Find a file and preview it. If the file appears correct, you have created a correct RAID layout.

> The Virtual Block RAID object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes

If R‑Studio for Linux detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on the Drives panel. The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID configuration..