That is, you can construct the original RAID from its drives and/or drive images in R-Studio and process it as you would any other device object. Working with RAIDs in R-Studio is based on the concept of virtual volume sets and RAIDs. For example, for a mirror (RAID 1) of two drives, at least one must be valid, whereas for a RAID 5 of three disks, the number of valid drives should be two. The number of drives needed in order to get data back depends on the RAID layout. But what to do if you have only drives or drive images of a faulty RAID? R-Studio can still help you to get the data back, provided that the drives necessary for the RAID to operate are working or you have the images of those drives. R-Studio detects and treats valid software or hardware RAIDs as regular drives/volumes.
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