RAID$94606$ - translation to german
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RAID$94606$ - translation to german

ANY OF A SET OF STANDARD CONFIGURATIONS OF REDUNDANT ARRAYS OF INDEPENDENT DISKS
RAID1; RAID0; RAID5; RAID 5; RAID 0; RAID 1; Jaybod; Raid 5; RAID6; RAID 6; RAID-5; RAID 2; RAID 3; RAID 4; Raid levels; Striped volume; RAID3; RAID-1; RAID4; Raid-0; RAID-0; RAID-3; RAID-4; RAID-6; Raid0; Raid1; Raid-1; Raid2; Raid-6; Raid6; Raid-5; Raid5; Raid-4; Raid4; Raid3; Raid-2; Raid-3; Raid 3; Raid 1; Raid 0; Raid 4; Raid 6; RAID-2; Standard RAID level
  • Diagram of a RAID 2 setup
  • Diagram of a RAID 0 setup
  • Diagram of a RAID 1 setup
  • parity]] bytes, shown are two blocks of data in different colors.
  • parity]] block (a stripe)
  • parity]] block (a stripe). This diagram shows ''Left Asynchronous'' layout
  • parity]] block

RAID      
n. Angriff, Überfall, Einbruch; (Comput) Diskettenanlage, Anlage die einige Festplatten beinhaltet und die ein sicheres Speichern und ein schnelles Laden der Dateien ermöglicht
Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks         
  • Storage servers with 24 hard disk drives each and built-in hardware RAID controllers supporting various RAID levels
  • A [[SATA 3.0]] controller that provides RAID functionality through proprietary firmware and drivers
DATA STORAGE VIRTUALIZATION TECHNOLOGY
Redundant array of inexpensive disks; Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks; Redundant Arrays of Independent Disks; Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks; RAID array; Raid array; Redundant Array of Independent Disks; Advanced Data Guarding; Redundant array of independent disks; GVinum; Fakeraid; FakeRAID; Fake-RAID; Fake-raid; Disc duplex; Disk duplexing; Disk duplex; Mirror RAID; Mirroring RAID; RAID mirror; RAID mirroring; RAID Array; RAID storage; Hybrid RAID; Hardware RAID compared to Software RAID; Software RAID; Redundant array of independant disks; R.A.I.D.; RAID 5 write hole; Fake RAID; RAID write hole; RAID stripe alignment; RAID-F; Unrecoverable read error; Unrecoverable Read Error; Unrecoverable read errors; Unrecoverable Read Errors; Unrecoverable bit error; Unrecoverable Bit Error; Unrecoverable bit errors; Unrecoverable Bit Errors; Latent sector error; Latent Sector Error; Latent sector errors; Punctured Stripe in RAID Arrays
Festplattenanlage, Anlage die einige Festplatten beinhaltet um ein sicheres Speichern und ein schnelles Laden der Dateien zu ermöglichen
air-raid shelter         
  • A couple demonstrating the use of a Morrison shelter
  • Children preparing to sleep in the Anderson shelter in their living room during frequent bombing raids on Bournemouth in 1941
  • An unburied Anderson Shelter in 2007; this shelter had seen use after the war as a shed
  • [[London Underground]] station in use as an air-raid shelter during World War II
  • Günter Leonhardt aviation museum]] near Hannover, Germany
  • An abandoned Stanton shelter at the disused airfield, [[RAF Beaulieu]] (2007)
  • The inside of an Israeli bomb shelter in 2012
  • German anti-aircraft shelter from the Second World War at the shipyard in [[Gdańsk]] was built without a basement due to the presence of groundwater
  • The Hochbunker in [[Trier]]
  • [[Kleines Berlin]] ('Little Berlin' in German) is the complex of underground air-raid tunnels dating to [[World War II]], which still exists in [[Trieste]], Italy
  • Residents sheltering in a [[Kyiv Metro]] station during the [[2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine]].
  • A normal Finnish S1-shelter steel door; 'S' is short for ''suoja'' (protection, shelter)
  • Winkelturm in [[Wünsdorf]], [[Brandenburg]]
STRUCTURE WHICH PROTECTS AGAINST ENEMY ATTACKS FROM THE AIR
Anderson shelter; Morrison shelter; Morrison shelters; Bomb bunker; Air-raid shelters; Hochbunker; Anderson shelters; Air raid shelters; Bomb shelters; Andersen shelter; Andersen shelters; Air Raid Shelters; Air-raid shelter; Anti-aircraft shelter; Anderson Shelters; Morrison Shelters; Anderson Shelter
luftdichter Keller

Definition

Depredatory
·adj Tending or designed to depredate; characterized by depredation; plundering; as, a depredatory incursion.

Wikipedia

Standard RAID levels

In computer storage, the standard RAID levels comprise a basic set of RAID ("redundant array of independent disks" or "redundant array of inexpensive disks") configurations that employ the techniques of striping, mirroring, or parity to create large reliable data stores from multiple general-purpose computer hard disk drives (HDDs). The most common types are RAID 0 (striping), RAID 1 (mirroring) and its variants, RAID 5 (distributed parity), and RAID 6 (dual parity). Multiple RAID levels can also be combined or nested, for instance RAID 10 (striping of mirrors) or RAID 01 (mirroring stripe sets). RAID levels and their associated data formats are standardized by the Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA) in the Common RAID Disk Drive Format (DDF) standard. The numerical values only serve as identifiers and do not signify performance, reliability, generation, or any other metric.

While most RAID levels can provide good protection against and recovery from hardware defects or defective sectors/read errors (hard errors), they do not provide any protection against data loss due to catastrophic failures (fire, water) or soft errors such as user error, software malfunction, or malware infection. For valuable data, RAID is only one building block of a larger data loss prevention and recovery scheme – it cannot replace a backup plan.