Why is RAID 0 classed as RAID when it’s not redundant

hardware-raidraidraid0software-raid

I've worked in IT quite a number of years, so I know what a RAID array is, what RAID 0 is, RAID 1, 5, 6, 10, 50, 60, etc., but something sprung to mind in a recent conversation at work; if RAID stands for redundant array of independent (or inexpensive) disks, then why is RAID 0 classed as RAID at all and not just a striped array?

Having data striped across multiple disks on the one array offers no redundancy whatsoever so why is it classed as a RAID array? Surely the lowest number should be RAID 1 (mirrored) as that's when redundancy actually starts?

Best Answer

You actually part answered this in your question.

The lowest form of RAID is RAID 1. RAID 0 was added well after RAID was defined (can't find reference to a date for this though)

The 0 in RAID 0 is used to signify that actually it isn't considered redundant. Think of it as more True/False where 0 is False.