Recreating data that existed on a drive before the drive failed. You can rebuild data only on virtual disks with data redundancy.
The regeneration of all data from a failed disk in a RAID level 1, 5, 10, or 5 array to a replacement disk. A disk rebuild normally occurs without interruption of application access to data stored on the array virtual disk.
Removing an existing line and replacing it with a new, higher capacity line.
To restore the robot to the original specifications of the manufacturer, to the extent possible.
To disassemble a particular device, clean it thoroughly, replace worn parts, and reassemble it. Engines, clutches, carburetors, and brakes are sometimes rebuilt as part of the maintenance or restoration of older vehicles. You can rebuild a part yourself with a kit containing instructions and part replacements, or you can buy a rebuilt part and turn in your old part for a core charge. Rebuilding is sometimes called overhauling.
The operation of recreating data belonging to a failed member of a redundant disk array and writing that data onto a replacement disk drive.
The regeneration of all data to a replacement disk from a failed disk in a logical drive with a RAID level 1, 5, 10 or 50 array. A disk rebuild normally occurs without interrupting normal operations on the affected logical drive, though some degradation of performance of the disk subsystem can occur.
The physical upgrade of a cable system, often involving the replacement of amplifiers, power supplies, passive devices and sometimes the cable, strand, hardware and subscriber unit.