1 / 31

FDISK

FDISK. Partitioning Hard Disks. History. We bought our new hard disk drive Right size for BIOS and OS Right connections (PATA/SATA) We installed our new drive Red stripe to Pin 1 Power connector Master/Slave jumper set correctly – or- Serial ATA connector and power connector

cira
Télécharger la présentation

FDISK

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FDISK Partitioning Hard Disks

  2. History • We bought our new hard disk drive • Right size for BIOS and OS • Right connections (PATA/SATA) • We installed our new drive • Red stripe to Pin 1 • Power connector • Master/Slave jumper set correctly – or- • Serial ATA connector and power connector • We checked that the new drive “shows up” in CMOS

  3. Partitioning a Drive • We need to create one, or more, partitions on a drive as a first step to data storage • Partitioning sets the boundaries for our data/files area • Partitioning is loosely related to what file system (next topic) we intend to use • Partitioning sets the drive letter assignment (C:, D:, etc.)

  4. Why Partition • DOS 3.3 could only use a 32 MB partition, even as disk sizes grew beyond that • Today, Windows can use up to 2.2TB with MBR • Allows flexibility in how you use a drive: C: for Windows, D: for data, E: for pictures… • Partitioning allows for more than one OS on a hard disk drive – though not recommended • Partitioning sets boundaries for FORMAT

  5. Partitioning Creates • Master Boot Record (MBR) – small code file that transfers control from POST to OS; it lives in the Boot Sector • Partition Table, also in Boot Sector, stores information about partition(s). Sector 0.

  6. Partition Boot Sector Stores location of boot file. Partition Partition

  7. Primary Partitions • Primary Partition stores the OS • Have to have (at least) one Primary • Primary must be set Active to boot • In Windows, the Primary Partition is C: • In theory, we could have four Primaries, but FDISK only allows for one; Disk Manager allows four

  8. Multiple Primary • Here is an example of multiple Primary Partitions, but still only one is Active:

  9. Extended Partition Type • Not required for bootable system; optional • Extended Partitions are NOT bootable, can’t store a bootable OS here • Can only have one Extended Partition on a physical drive • We have to further divide the Extended Partition into “Logical Drives” – which get drive letters – before we can use the area • EP does not get a drive letter

  10. Dynamic Disks • Introduced with Windows 2000 • Also called Dynamic Storage Partitioning • Works with “Volumes” not Partitions • Can span: A volume can be part on one (physical) hard drive and part on another (physical) hard drive. • Proprietary to Microsoft; has to be done “after the fact” – after OS is installed • XP Home and Media Center won’t do this

  11. Dynamic Volumes • Simple is like a Primary Partition – basic vanilla flavor • Spanned uses two sections of two drives as one drive letter. Risky • Stripped volumes are Raid 0 – half data goes on one drive, half on another • Mirrored volumes are Raid 1 – same data goes on two physical drives • Raid 5 requires three drives for data, data and parity

  12. GUID Partitions • Globally Unique Identifier Partition Table (GPT) • Large number of partitions • Disk “Translation” is over • 32- and 64-bit code is possible • Have to have Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) motherboard • Allows for disks above 2.2TB • Only in 64-bit versions of Windows

  13. Hidden Partitions • Some computer makers use these to store image of hard drive for restore operations • Normally, you don’t see this partition – special utilities access it • Can not create one with FDISK

  14. Partitioning Tools • FDISK – DOS, Windows up to ME • Disk Administrator – Windows NT • Disk Management – Windows 2K, XP, Vista and 7 • With FDISK, you can’t change a partition without deleting it first: total destruction of data; DM allows some changes • Third-party tools (PartitionMagic) allow changes to existing partitions

  15. What it looks like MBR Primary Partition C: 0 GB 200 GB Primary Partition C: Extended Partition

  16. What it looks like MBR Primary Partition C: 0 GB 200 GB Primary Partition C: Extended Partition Logical Drives Drive D: Drive E:

  17. File Systems • Windows NT • Windows 95a • Windows 95b • Windows 2000 • Windows XP • Windows Vista NTFS 4 FAT 16 FAT 32 NTFS (4), 5

  18. FDISK Opener

  19. FDISK Main Menu

  20. Viewing Current Partition(s)

  21. FDISK Main Menu

  22. Creating a Partition

  23. All One Partition?

  24. Then How Big? Make sure this is the drive you want! Number (for size) or number+% for size

  25. Here it is Not formatted yet Status is blank

  26. FDISK Main Menu

  27. Drive Letter Assignment • Primary Partitions • Logical Drives (within Extended Partition) • All non-hard disk drives

  28. Deleting Partitions

  29. When you have a second drive Notice additional option

More Related