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Disk partitioning

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In computer engineering, hard disk drive partitioning is the creation of logical divisions upon a hard disk that allows one to apply operating system-specific logical formatting.

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Purpose

Partitioning allows one to have multiple file systems on a single hard disk. There are many reasons to do this including:

Partitioning schemes

Microsoft Windows

With Microsoft Windows, the standard partitioning scheme is to create a single partition, the C: drive, where the operating system, user data, applications, and page file all reside. Some users, however, prefer to create multiple partitions so that the operating system can be stored separately from other kinds of data. While this scheme generally results in slightly lower performance due to additional work needing to be done by both the hard drive and the operating system, proponents of multiple partitions generally point to the benefit of being able to erase a single partition (typically the operating system itself) while retaining the other data. When used in conjunction with partition copying programs such as diskdump, PartitionMagic or Norton Ghost, the use of multiple partitions allows computer users to quickly recover from viruses, rootkits, and remote trojans.

On NT-based operating systems (including Windows 2000, Windows XP, and Windows Server products), the My Documents folder, a special folder that typically contains the user's documents and media files, can be mounted to a separate partition. This has the effect of being able to use a separate partition (or physical hard drive) while retaining the convenience of using My Documents as a storage location.

UNIX systems

For UNIX-based and UNIX-like operating systems such as Linux, fancy partitioning creates separate partitions for /, /boot, /home, /tmp, /usr, /var, /opt and /swap. (The same is true for Sun-based operating systems, except that partitions are called slices.) This ensures that if one file system gets corrupted, the rest of the data (the other file systems) stay intact, minimizing data loss. This has the disadvantage of subdividing the drive into small, fixed-size partitions, so, for instance, a user can fill up their /home partition and run out of useable hard drive space, even though other partitions still have plenty of free space. A good implementation requires the user to predict how much space each partition will need, sometimes a difficult task. Typical desktop systems use the other convention; a "/" (root) partition containing the entire filesystem and a separate swap partition. A /home partition is useful for desktop uses as it allows a clean reinstall (or a fresh install of another Linux distribution) while leaving data intact.

List of partition utilities

See also

Further reading

External links

 


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