Book Image

CompTIA Security+ Certification Guide

By : Ian Neil
Book Image

CompTIA Security+ Certification Guide

By: Ian Neil

Overview of this book

CompTIA Security+ is a worldwide certification that establishes the fundamental knowledge required to perform core security functions and pursue an IT security career. CompTIA Security+ Certification Guide is a best-in-class exam study guide that covers all of CompTIA Security+ 501 exam objectives. It is authored by Ian Neil, who is a world-class trainer of CompTIA Security+ 501. Packed with self-assessment scenarios and realistic exam questions, this guide will help you master the core concepts to succeed in the exam the first time you take it. Using relevant examples, you will learn all the important security fundamentals from Certificates and Encryption to Identity and Access Management concepts. You will then dive into the important domains of the exam; namely, threats, attacks and vulnerabilities, technologies and tools, architecture and design, risk management, and cryptography and Public Key Infrastructure (PKI). This book comes with over 600 practice questions with detailed explanation that is at the exam level and also includes two mock exams to help you with your study plan. This guide will ensure that encryption and certificates are made easy for you.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
12
Mock Exam 1
13
Mock Exam 2
15
Acronyms

Disk Resiliency and Redundancy

We are going to look at different disk setups - some of which can provide fault tolerance or redundancy, meaning that, if a disk fails, then the data is still available. RAID 0 is used for faster disk access, but provides neither fault tolerance nor redundancy. Let's first look at the different RAID setups, as these will be heavily tested.

Redundant Array of Independent Disks

There is a need for the disk setup on servers to provide redundancy; this is where if one disk fails, the data is still available. We have already looked at failover clustering in Chapter 5, Understanding Network Components, where two servers share a quorum disk - the single point of failure in that scenario would be...