Disk Management of Windows OS
Disk Management of Windows OS
Disk Management of Windows OS
Subject:
System Administration
Presented to:
Miss. Sobia
Contents
Disk Management
Shrink a Partition
Delete a Partition
Extend Partition
What is Disk Management?
Create
Delete
format partitions
recognizes.
How To Use Disk Management
How To Use Disk Management
•Format a Drive
•Shrink a Partition
•Extend a Partition
•Delete a Partition
Click Next,
confirm your
options, and
then click
Finish.
Steps For Partition
The Windows 7 Disk Management tool will now show the space configured as a
new partition.
Shrink a Partition
In the field provided in the Shrink dialog box, enter the amount
of space by
which to shrink the disk.
Shrink a Partition
Click Shrink
Steps For Deleting and Extend
Primary Partition:
•A primary partition can be used to boot an Operating System. Your
Windows OS is installed on a primary partition.
•A primary partition contains one file system.
•In DOS and all early versions of Microsoft Windows systems, Microsoft
required what it called the system partition to be the first partition.
•All Windows operating systems from Windows 95 onwards can be located
on (almost) any partition, but the boot files (io.sys, bootmgr, ntldr, etc.) must
reside on a primary partition.
•A PC's BIOS (see Boot sequence on standard PC) may also impose
specific requirements as to which partition must contain the primary OS.
Basic Disk
Extended Partition:
•An extended partition is used to hold logical drives.
Simple Volume:
•Simple volume equals to primary partition and users can create lots of
simple volumes on one dynamic disk, not limited to 4.
•A simple volume can be extended to unallocated space on the same disk
but keeps simple. However, if users extend it to unallocated space on other
disk, it will become a spanned volume.
Dynamic Disk
Spanned Volume:
•Use free space from multiple disks in the system.
•Spanned volumes combine areas of unallocated space from multiple disks
into one logical volume. The areas of unallocated space can be different
sizes.
Dynamic Disk
Stripped Volume:
•When users store data to a striped volume, the very data will be divided to
multiple parts and saved to all portions of striped volume at the same time,
which can enhance data storage speed.
•Nevertheless, this kind of volume does not have the ability to create
fault-tolerant volumes.
Dynamic Disk
Mirror Volume:
•That mirror data from one disk to another.
•Mirrored volume is created by 2 unallocated spaces with the same size. It o
ffers fault-tolerance by imaging data on the volume. If one of disks failed, dat
a on the failed disk will be unavailable, but Windows can run normally by rea
ding data on the other disk.
Dynamic Disk
RADI-5:
•A RAID-5 volume is a fault-tolerant volume that stripes data and parity acro
ss three or more disks.
•Parity is a calculated value that is used to reconstruct data if one disk fails.
When a disk fails, Windows Server 2003 continues to operate by recreating t
he data that was on the failed disk from the remaining data and parity.
MBR and GPT
Partitions 4 Depends of FS
Security No Yes