Comment by chungy
4 days ago
To be fair, RAID5/6 don't have parity disks either. RAID2, RAID3, and RAID4 do, but they're all effectively dead technology for good reason.
I think it's easy for a lot of people to conceptualize RAID5/6 and RAID-Zn as having "data disks" and "parity disks" to wrap around the complicated topic of how it works, but all of them truly interleave and compute parity data across all disks, allowing any single disk to die.
I've been of two minds on the persistent myth of "parity disks" but I usually ignore it, because it's a convenient lie to understand your data is safe, at least. It's also a little bit the same way that raidz1 and raidz2 are sometimes talked about as "RAID5" and "RAID6"; the effective benefits are the same, but the implementation is totally different.
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