Disk Partitioning - Wikipedia
Disk Partitioning - Wikipedia
Disk Partitioning - Wikipedia
PC partition types
This section describes the master boot
record (MBR) partitioning scheme, as used
historically in DOS, Microsoft Windows
and Linux (among others) on PC-
compatible computer systems. As of the
mid-2010s, most new computers use the
GUID Partition Table (GPT) partitioning
scheme instead. For examples of other
partitioning schemes, see the general
article on partition tables.
Primary partition …
Extended partition …
Partitioning schemes
Unix-like systems …
(
A GRUB startup menu showing Ubuntu Linux (with
three different boot modes) and Windows Vista
options
Partition recovery
When a partition is deleted, its entry is
removed from a table and the data is no
longer accessible. The data remains on
the disk until being overwritten.
Specialized recovery utilities, may be able
to locate lost file systems and recreate a
partition table which includes entries for
these recovered file systems. Some disk
utilities may overwrite a number of
beginning sectors of a partition they
delete. For example, if Windows Disk
Management (Windows 2000/XP, etc.) is
used to delete a partition, it will overwrite
the first sector (relative sector 0) of the
partition before removing it. It still may be
possible to restore a FAT or NTFS partition
if a backup boot sector is available.
Compressed disks
HDDs can be compressed to create
additional space. In DOS and early
Microsoft Windows, programs such as
Stacker (DR-DOS except 6.0), SuperStor
(DR DOS 6.0), DoubleSpace, or DriveSpace
(Windows 95) were used. This
compression was done by creating a very
large file on the partition, then storing the
disk's data in this file. At startup, device
drivers opened this file and assigned it a
separate letter. Frequently, to avoid
confusion, the original partition and the
compressed drive had their letters
swapped, so that the compressed disk is
C:, and the uncompressed area (often
containing system files) is given a higher
name.
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media
related to Disk partitions.
References
1. Calkins, Bill (2013). Oracle Solaris 11
System Administration .
2. Levi, Bozidar (2002). UNIX
Administration.
3. Ward, Brian (2004). How Linux Works:
What Every SuperUser Should Know .
No Starch Press. p. 39.
ISBN 9781593270353.
Further reading
Stéphane Martineau; Jens Olsson; Nick
Roberts (2002-11-02). "The Alt-OS-
Development Partition Specification
(AODPS)" . 0.4. Archived from the
original on 2004-02-13.
Andries Brouwer (1995–2004). "List of
partition identifiers for PCs" .
Andries Brouwer (1999-09-16). "Minimal
Partition Table Specification" .
"partitioning primer" . Ranish. 1998-08-
05. Archived from the original on 2004-
08-04. Retrieved 2004-08-15.
Allen Smith. "ATA (EIDE) Drive Capacity
and Addressing" .
Microsoft (2005-06-03). "Using GPT
Drives" . Archived from the original on
2005-07-06.
"MS-DOS Partitioning Summary" .
Support. Microsoft.
External links
Retrieved from
"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=Disk_partitioning&oldid=939813164"