Dynamic and Basic Disk
Dynamic and Basic Disk
Dynamic and Basic Disk
Each dynamic disk will hold a these information mentioned if there are several dynamic disk on your computer.
This means that all dynamic disks are interrelated. The relevance of each dynamic disk let you will see a
“Missing” disk which is shown in Windows Disk Management if you remove a dynamic disk from your system. All
this is saved in LDM database, so LDM database is vary important the same as Partition Table of Basic Disk.
You can know clearly as follows:
The blue area at the beginning of Dynamic Disk is the MBR which saves the information of the Partition Table on
the disk. This partition table is not the same as one of Basic Disk. Its main function is to make Windows and
Other Disk Manager can know the disk is a dynamic disk instead of an empty disk. The blue at the end of the
above is the LDM database.
You can upgrade the basic disk to dynamic easily, but Dynamic disks could not be appropriate in some cases
which you need, so you require convert back to basic disk. Using Dynamic Disk Converter is to safely convert
dynamic disk to basic, please see How to convert DYNAMIC DISK to BASIC for more information, for Basic Disk,
please visit What is Basic Disk.
On Dynamic Disk, the volumes are divided into Simple Volume, Spanned Volume, Striped Volume, Mirrored
Volume and RAID 5 Volume. They have drive letter and volume label to differentiate.
Simple Volume
The simple volume only can be created on the single disk as partition of Basic Disk, but its space can be
inconsecutive. The screenshot is as follows:
E: and G: is consecutive simple volume, but F: is inconsecutive on a single dynamic disk.
Spanned Volume
It is created from free space that is linked together from multiple disks (up to 32 disks). The sequence of
writing data for Spanned Volume is that the volume on the first disk is filled full and then turn to fill the
next dynamic disk. Spanned Volume can allow the fragmentary free space of multiple disks is
recomposed as one volume, so it can fully utilize the resources of multi-disk. However, it can not be
fault-tolerant volume and can not improve performance of the disk. The following screenshot is shown.
F: is a Spanned Volume and it utilized the space on Disk 1 and Disk2.
Striped Volume
It's similar with Spanned Volume, and consists of two and more disks. However, the difference is that it
can improve the efficiency and performance of disk, because when operating system writes data to
Striped Volume, this data will be separated into many pieces of 64KB, and then concurrent writes a
different data block to each disk. A striped volume cannot be mirrored or extended and is not fault-
tolerant. The screenshot is below:
E: is a Striped Volume, and the space is the same on the two disks, here is 1023MB. Spanned and
Striped Volume shows the different color bar to differentiate them in Windows Disk Management.
Mirrored Volume
We can simply understand that Mirrored Volume is a duplicate of Simple Volume. It needs two disks;
one stores the data which is being used, and another keep a copy of previous one. When a disk fails,
the other one can be used immediately. A Mirrored Volume provides fault-tolerant, and it's also known
as RAID-1 as follows:
E: is a Mirrored Volume. The data of the Disk1-E is the absolute same as the Disk2-E.
RAID-5 Volume
A RAID-5 requires three disks at least; it not only can enhance the efficiency of the disk but also provide
the best fault-tolerant. You could simply consider RAID-5 is a combination of Striped and Mirrored
Volume. A RAID-5 volume is a fault-tolerant volume whose data is striped across an array of three or
more disks. Parity (a calculated value that can be used to reconstruct data after a failure) is also striped
across the disk array. If a physical disk fails, the portion of the RAID-5 volume that was on that failed
disk can be recreated from the remaining data and the parity. The following is a screenshot of RAID-5.