Softraid 5 Serial
Any disk can fail suddenly. The more disks you have, and the longer you have them, the more likely you are to experience disk failure. Why gamble with your data?
SoftRAID 5.6 Crack 2017 Mac apple stopped actively working on AppleRAID in 2009 and removed full support for it in El Capitan. If you ever had a problem. Create and maintain RAID 0 (stripe), RAID 1 (mirror), RAID 4, RAID 5, RAID 1+0 and non-RAID volumes. Volume discounts (applied automatically at checkout): 3–4.
Use SoftRAID and get advance warning of a failing disk All disks fail—good ones at about 3% a year, bad ones at 25% a year, and really bad ones at 33%—but with SoftRAID, disk failure doesn't mean catastophe. SoftRAID's unique RAID features not only alert you to impending disk failure, keep your files safe and provide fast data access, but, with RAID levels 1, 4, 5 and 1+0, you can carry on working right through disk failure, so you don't loose your files, or miss your deadline! SoftRAID helps you work fast, save your data and make your deadline. If you're a video or photo editor, choose SoftRAID RAID 0 and achieve for editing scratch work.
If a truck tire blows, the result can be catastrophic—unless the truck has double tires. Economics For The Ib Diploma Ellie Tragakes Pdf Converter. With a double-tired truck, the load is spread, so if a tire fails, the truck stays safe. RAID applies the same principle to your disk drives.
A SoftRAID RAID volume spreads your files across two or more disk drives. Not only does this speed up data access, but if one disk fails, your data is safe on the remaining disk(s)!
And disk drives do fail For protection against disk failure you need or above. RAID 0 offers no protection.
With a double-tired truck, the load is spread, so if a tire fails, the truck stays safe. RAID applies the same principle to your disk drives. A SoftRAID RAID volume protects you against disk failure, by spreading your files across two or more disk drives. Not only does this speed up data access, but if one disk fails, your data is safe on the remaining disk(s)!
* And disk drives do fail For protection against disk failure you need or above. RAID 0 offers no protection (but does offer greater speed). SoftRAID RAID 4 and RAID 5 volumes are faster than RAID 1+0 volumes.
They are almost as fast as stripe (RAID 0) volumes and have the advantage of protecting you from disk failure. When one of the disks fails in a RAID 4 or RAID 5 volume, you can still keep reading and writing files on that volume, without interruption. RAID 4 and RAID 5 are ideal for reading and writing large files, particularly RAID 4 which is up to 20% faster when using SSDs. They are also good for reading small files which are frequently accessed.
They are not a good choice if you need to write a lot of small files as fast as possible - RAID 1+0 is better for this. Create a volume over two or more disks.
Unlike hardware RAID, a SoftRAID volume can be spread over two or more disks, so you can use the fastest part of each disk (the first 25%-30%) for data you need to access quickly. Slower sections of the disk can be used to create other volumes, where speed isn't such an issue. Increase your volume's connection speed. Not only can your SoftRAID volume be spread over several disks but you can put those disks in different enclosures to maximise connection speed. If you put half your volume's disks in one Thunderbolt enclosure and the other half in a second enclosure connected to a different Thunderbolt port, you'll be creating a volume which uses the bandwidth of two Thunderbolt connections, so it goes faster than a volume connected to a single Thunderbolt cable. That's just not possible with hardware RAID.
How we measured performance The read and write performance displayed above was measured using AJA System Test running on a 2013 MacPro with a 3.5 GHz six core processor and 16 GB of RAM. For HDD tests, the Mac was connected to 1 (for '4 Disks') or 2 (for '8 Disks') OWC ThunderBay 4 enclosures containing Toshiba 3 TB hard disks. For SSD tests, the Mac was connected to 1 (for '4 SSDs') or 2 (for '8 SSDs') OWC ThunderBay mini enclosures containing 960 GB OWC Mercury Extreme Pro solid state disks. All RAID 0 and RAID 1+0 volumes were tested with a stripe unit size of 64 KB.
SoftRAID RAID 4 & RAID 5 volumes are faster than RAID 1+0 volumes and almost as fast as stripe (RAID 0) volumes (the fastest SoftRAID solution). Unlike RAID 0, they'll also protect you from disk failure. If a disk in a SoftRAID RAID 4 or RAID 5 volume fails, you can keep using the volume normally. Choose RAID 4 if you are using SSDs for your volume. SoftRAID RAID 5 volumes are ideal for reading and writing large files. They are also good for small files which are frequently read but infrequently written.. SPEED: Think hardware raid is always faster?
SoftRAID provides super fast read and write speeds which can match more expensive hardware RAID solutions. To maximize read/write speeds, SoftRAID harnesses the power of your computer’s powerful CPU, but only for mere microseconds at a time so other running applications aren’t impacted.
Even if your hardware RAID box controller chip was top of the line when you bought it, it can quickly become out of date as chip speeds improve, and you won’t be able to swap it out for a new one; with software RAID you can easily take advantage of improvements in chip technology by moving your RAID array to a new computer with a newer and faster CPU. COST: Many people wrongly view software RAID as a cheap solution that’s not powerful, even though it can compete on speed and outperform on safety when compared with hardware RAID. In fact, expensive hardware RAID solutions are not automatically superior (especially since the chip in even fairly low end laptops is usually more powerful as the chip in an expensive hardware RAID controller). A statistic that may well surprise you is that a majority of companies who spend over $10,000 on RAID solutions choose software RAID because of its flexibility and value.
Those companies have already shown where their confidence lies. Download SoftRAID or SoftRAID Lite now for a FREE TRIAL! SoftRAID now and try it for free for 30 days.
You can create new volumes with any RAID level SoftRAID supports, or convert your existing AppleRAID stripe (RAID 0) or mirror (RAID 1) volumes. If, after 30 days, you decide not to use SoftRAID, you can convert your stripe (RAID 0) and mirror (RAID 1) volumes to AppleRAID (or back to AppleRAID if that's what you started with) and not lose any of your files. However you will lose all of SoftRAID's great features and, if you had any other RAID level, you will lose any disk protection you had. * After more than 500 hours testing three popular disk brands, SoftRAID staff found one brand and model had a 33% failure rate—though most worked fine. Their findings showed bad disks failing at between 25%–33% a year, and even 'good' disks failing at a rate of about 3% a year. Even SSDs (Solid State Disks) fail at about the same rate.
Your disk could be one that fails at a 3% rate, a 25% rate, or even higher; you won't know till it happens. Even if you have one of the safer disks, the more you have, and the longer you have them, increases your risk of failure to as much as 25%. This is why you should only use a RAID 0 volume as part of a larger backup system. If all your data is only on a RAID 0 volume, it's unprotected; if your disk fails, you could lose it all.
SoftRAID allows you to create and manage disk arrays to increase performance and reliability. SoftRAID allows the user to create and manage RAID 4 and 5 volumes, RAID 1+0, and RAID 1 (Mirror) and RAID 0 (Stripe) volumes.
SoftRAID also provides “predictive disk failure”, where users are alerted to potential disk failures even before they fail. SoftRAID’s intuitive interface and powerful feature set make this utility a must-have for any OS X Server admin, “Pro” user, photographer, digital-video editor, or desktop user who wants more reliable backup for his computer. WHAT’S NEW Version 5.5: New Features • SoftRAID can now convert AppleRAID stripe (RAID 0) and mirror (RAID 1) volumes to SoftRAID format. When you convert an AppleRAID volume, all of your files are preserved. You can even convert Apple non-RAID volumes to SoftRAID. • SoftRAID can now convert stripe (RAID 0) volumes to RAID 1+0.
It can also convert some RAID 0 volumes to RAID 4 (requires a stripe unit size of 16 KB). • The SoftRAID application and SoftRAID Monitor are now translated into French, German and Spanish. • The user interface now conforms with the look of the Finder in El Capitan, Mac OS X 10.11. • The SoftRAID Monitor menu bar indicator is now displayed in grey when the user has selected the 'Graphite' appearance in the 'General' panel of System Preferences. • The SoftRAID application and volume icons are new.
• The SoftRAID Monitor now detects a bug in Mac OS X which causes disks to be ejected while in use. When this occurs, a dialog is displayed giving the user instructions which can help prevent this bug from reoccurring (for more info Bug Fixes • Fix kernel panic bug which occurs when you remove 2 disks from a RAID 5 volume. • SoftRAID now prevents users from removing disks from RAID volumes in situations where it might result in data loss. • Fixed a bug which could cause the SoftRAID Monitor to display a dialog indicating that the user was in evaluation mode even when a serial number had been entered. • Fixed a bug which caused two warning dialogs to appear the first time SoftRAID is run, both of which say that SoftRAID can be used for 30 days in trial mode.
This version only displays one of these dialogs. • Fixed a bug which caused some entries in the SoftRAID.log file to be garbled or incomplete. This would occur when two or more entries were being written simultaneously. • Rebuild and validate operations now start instantly regardless of volume optimization setting. They run for the first 15 seconds as if the volume were optimized for workstation before using their actual optimization setting. • The 'missing disk' string in the volume tile is now blue for RAID 1 volumes which contain at least 1 in-sync secondary disk. If there are no in-sync secondary disks, the string is red.
• Prevented any disk which has a progress bar from being added to a volume or used to create a new volume. • The SoftRAID application no longer deletes the SoftRAID.log file when you select Uninstall SoftRAID from the Utilities menu. • Fixed a bug which allowed a user to shrink a volume to a size smaller than that which is displayed in the Resize Volume window. • Fixed a bug which caused SoftRAID to display Xsan volumes. SoftRAID would also display an error dialog when it couldn't read from the Xsan volumes. • Fixed several bugs which affected installing or uninstalling the SoftRAID driver on volumes other than the startup volume. • Fixed a bug which prevented the SoftRAID application from automatically updating the driver on bootable volumes other than the current startup volume.
• Fixed a bug which prevented the SoftRAID Monitor and SoftRAID application from connecting to the SoftRAID upgrade server. • Removed the help button from all dialogs which are displayed before the user logs in. The Apple help system does not work until the user logs in so these buttons were non- functional. • Fixed a bug in the SoftRAID application which caused tiles for AppleRAID volumes to incorrectly indicate that they were missing disks. • Fixed a bug which could cause the 'Launch SoftRAID' menu item in the SoftRAID Monitor menu to launch the incorrect copy of SoftRAID. • Change SoftRAID application so it no longer creates an error entry in the system.log file (the entry was: 'Could not find imaged named 'SR_AppHeaderText'.'
• Fixed a bug which caused the SoftRAID application to stop working if one or more of the volume names included kanji characters. • Fixed a bug in the SoftRAID driver which could cause the driver event queue to become full. This happened when many degraded volumes were present and would cause a error dialog to appear which said that the driver event queue was full. • All versions of SoftRAID now use the ThunderBay volume icons if all the disks for a given volume are in a ThunderBay enclosure. Icons only change when a volume is first created.
• Fixed a bug which caused Tech Support Reports to not include crash logs. • Disabled serial numbers for purchases which have been refunded or upgraded. • Fixed a bug which caused the SoftRAID Monitor to crash at launch or when a new serial number was entered.
REQUIREMENTS OS X 10.6. Linde Lexcom Keygen. 8 or later, 64-bit processor Screenshots.