DELL XPS 600 User Manual

Page of 166
Setting Up and Using Your Computer
21
About Serial ATA Drives
Your computer supports up to three serial ATA hard drives. Serial ATA drives provide the 
following benefits by transferring data using serial technology and flexible cables that are 
thinner and longer than IDE cables:
Improved cable routing facilitates more efficient airflow inside the chassis.
Compact cable connectors save space on the system board and on the hard drive. Combined 
with the improved cable routing, this allows a more efficient utilization of space inside the 
chassis.
About Your RAID Configuration
 
NOTICE: 
If you might ever decide to migrate to a RAID array, before loading the operating system onto a 
hard drive, set up that drive as a single drive RAID 0 array. See "Creating an Array using the Nvidia 
MediaShield ROM Utility" on page 23 for i
nstructions.
This section provides an overview of the RAID configuration that you might have selected when 
you purchased your computer. Dell offers either a RAID level 0 configuration or a RAID level 1 
configuration on your Dell™ XPS computer. A RAID level 0 configuration is recommended for 
high-performance gaming, and a RAID level 1 configuration is recommended for the data 
integrity requirements of digital photography and audio.
 
NOTE: 
RAID levels do not represent a hierarchy. A RAID level 1 configuration is not inherently better or 
worse than a RAID level 0 configuration.
The drives in an array should be the same size in order to ensure that the larger drive does not 
contain unallocated (and therefore unusable) space.
RAID Level 0 Configuration
A RAID level 0 configuration uses a storage technique known as "data striping" to provide a high 
data access rate. Data striping is a method of writing consecutive segments, or stripes, of data 
sequentially across the physical drives to create a large virtual drive. Data striping allows one of 
the drives to read data while the other drive is searching for and reading the next block.