Am Mo, den 16.02.2004 schrieb Sam Barnett-Cormack um 12:08: > On Mon, 16 Feb 2004, Alexander Dalloz wrote: > > > Am Mo, den 16.02.2004 schrieb kaze um 04:57: > > > I might be totally wrong, but if you set up the RAID as hardware RAID, from > > > the OS's point of view there is only one hard drive - so there is _no_ OS / > > > software stuff to do. > > > > You are wrong, in the case you are speaking of those "fake" RAID > > adapters like the Belkin IDE the OP asked about or the low budget > > Promise or HighPoint controllers. they are just BIOS supported pure > > software (with special, often closed source driver) controllers. > > Speaking of IDE RAID controllers only the 3ware controllers are real > > hardware RAID controllers. They have an own logic chip doing the job. > > Actually, a lot of these cheap IDE RAID controllers really do do > something, and don't require any drivers. They do require a braindead OS > which trusts the BIOS completely. Of course, they generally do only do > RIAD0 and or RAID1, which are very light on the computation. Hi! Do you have specific examples about controllers (chips) working as RAID0/1 without any additional driver and on which OS? At least you are not speaking about Linux, aren't you? Alexander -- Alexander Dalloz | Enger, Germany | GPG key 1024D/ED695653 1999-07-13 Fedora GNU/Linux Core 1 (Yarrow) on Athlon CPU kernel 2.4.22-1.2166.nptl Sirendipity 12:11:10 up 1 day, 15:50, load average: 0.17, 0.21, 0.18 [ ÎÎÏÎÎ Ï'ÎÏÏÎÎ - gnothi seauton ]