A software RAID file system is defined as a system that distributes data redundantly across an array of disks attached to each of the workstations connected on a high-speed network. This configuration provides higher throughput and availability compared to conventional file systems. In this paper, we consider two specific issues regarding the distribution of data among the cluster, namely, striping and buffer caching for such an environment. Through simulation studies we compare the performance of various striping methods and show that for effective striping in software RAID file systems, it must take advantage of its flexible nature. Further, for buffer caching, we show that conventional caching schemes developed for distributed systems ar...