-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 El 2015-09-28 a las 12:48 +0200, Xen escribió:
On Sun, 27 Sep 2015, Anton Aylward wrote:
What I meant was that the "fake cards" require a driver to see the array of disks as one logical thing, without the driver the OS will just see it as independent logical disks, or physical disks.
So "not seeing the RAID as a RAID" means seeing individual disks without array organisation.
Not exactly. A driver is some software to interface with a certain hardware that does something. Like telling the video driver: paint me a square of this size, color, and position, and the hardware then goes and does it, on its own, once the driver writes the directions. The fake raid hardware does nothing. It is just the same as the separate disks with their interfaces. The CPU does it all, in code. Not driver. Don't confuse what Windows calls "driver" :-) - -- Cheers Carlos E. R. (from 13.1 x86_64 "Bottle" (Minas Tirith)) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (GNU/Linux) iF4EAREIAAYFAlYJNQ8ACgkQja8UbcUWM1x3gwD+NvMlgvpS6hWq/AyxXB4qAQU0 RS+xDgpeNysUMcRa4IIA/3NyfdXOC9gEiaZ9oJPuq6QYh4aA1WAFTq+tFwesDux7 =Mwgy -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----