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Xserve RAID. Xserve RAID is a attachment mass-storage server that was offered by Apple Inc. Xserve RAID held up to 14 hot-swappable Ultra-ATA hard drives, and had a capacity of 10.5 TB when filled with 750 GB modules. Xserve RAID supported RAID levels of 0, 0+1, 1, 3 and 5 in hardware, hybrid RAID levels such as 10 and 50 could be created in ...
A small Xserve cluster with an Xserve RAID and APC UPS. The Xserve is a discontinued series of rack-mounted servers that was manufactured by Apple Inc. between 2002 and 2011. It was Apple's first rack-mounted server, [1] and could function as a file server, web server or run high-performance computing applications in clusters – a dedicated cluster Xserve, the Xserve Cluster Node, without a ...
Xserve slot loading: Xserve: January 6, 2004 Xserve Cluster Node: Xserve: January 6, 2004 Xserve RAID: Xserve: February 19, 2008 May 2, 2003 iPod (3rd gen) iPod Classic: July 19, 2004 June 23, 2003 Power Mac G5: Power Macintosh: June 9, 2004 September 16, 2003 PowerBook G4 Aluminum (15") PowerBook G4: February 14, 2006 October 22, 2003 iBook G4 ...
Quantum Corporation claims: "Complete interoperability with Apple’s Xsan and Promise RAID and Allows Xsan and Xserve RAID to support AIX, HP-UX, IRIX, Red Hat Linux, SuSE Linux, Mac OS X, Solaris, and Windows clients, including support for 64 Bit Windows and Windows Vista." [5]
Xserve RAID; This page was last edited on 14 May 2021, at 11:10 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional ...
Apple labeled the drive as a server-grade drive in promotional material for Time Capsule, and also used this type of drive in its discontinued Xserve servers. Apple states that the Hitachi Deskstar meets or exceeds the 1 million hours mean time between failures (MTBF) recommendation for server-grade hard drives. [17]
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It represented an earnest effort to enter the enterprise computer market, and it was cheaper than competitors' similar machines. This was largely due to Fast ATA drives as opposed to the SCSI hard drives used in traditional rack-mounted servers. Apple later released the Xserve RAID, a 14 drive RAID that was again cheaper than competing systems.