♠ Posted by ggg in Computer Software at 21:20
Partitioning A Blank Hard Drive During XP
Installation
The assumption here is the partition
scheme will be created on a hard drive using a bootable
Windows XP CD. After booting from the CD and the initial
setup files have loaded the screen in Fig. 01 will be
displayed. If there is no existing operating system on the
drive the space will be listed as Unpartitioned in the lower
half of the screen. If there is an operating system
installed, the existing partitions will be listed in the
lower half of the screen. Selecting an existing partition
and using the D key will delete it, along with any data and
program files it contains. From this point there are a
number of different partitioning possibilities.
If ENTER is pressed the entire
unpartitioned space (in this case, 16379MB) will be used to
create a C: partition. There will be no other options
offered and the process will move forward to where you'll be
asked to choose what file system will be used to format the
partition.
Fig. 01
If the C key is pressed to
create a partition in the unpartitioned space you will be
taken to the screen shown in Fig. 02 where a custom size
partition may be created. The minimum and maximum sizes
allowed for the new partition are displayed for easy
reference along with a line where the new partition size is
entered. In this case I changed the default to 5000MB but
any size may be entered that falls between the minimum and
maximum allowed. Pressing Enter completes the creation
process for that partition and returns you to the Fig. 01
screen.
Fig. 02
As you can see in Fig. 03
there is now a C: partition that is defined as Partition 1
and is 4997MB in size even though the size I entered in Fig.
02 was 5000MB. There's a reason why the sizes vary but it's
outside the scope of this article so just accept that this
is the way things work. If it's critical that you have a
partition that's precisely sized, use the D key option to
delete the partition then go in and try a slightly
larger/smaller size than was entered previously. There's no
guarantee you'll ever hit the partition size right on the
nose but you should be able to get relatively close.
Fig. 03
If the partitioning process
was stopped at this point, the newly created C: partition
highlighted, the ENTER key selected and the installation of
XP allowed to complete you would end up with a partitioning
scheme as shown in Fig. 04 below. While this is a very
elementary partitioning scheme it's not without some merit.
The most important aspect of this scheme is that rather than
committing the entire hard drive space to partition C:, it
leaves the balance of the free space as Unallocated so it
can be effectively divided up into additional Primary or
Logical partitions after XP is installed.
Fig. 04
However, suppose you already
have a partitioning scheme in mind that's a bit more
extensive? Rather than merely having a C: partition you'd
like to have additional partitions created. Simple enough.
Refer back to Fig. 03 and rather than selecting the ENTER
key, use the down arrow key to highlight the Unpartitioned
Space entry and then press the C key. Once again you'll
enter the size of the desired partition and hit Enter.
Repeat the process as many times as needed until all the
partitions have been created or you run out of Unallocated
space. In Fig. 05 I have created two additional partitions
(E: and F:) and there remains 4377MB of Unpartitioned Space
that could be used for additional partitions.
Fig. 05
I stopped at this point,
highlighted the newly created C: partition, selected the
ENTER key and allowed the installation of XP to complete,
ending up with a partitioning scheme as shown in Fig. 06
below. If you compare Fig. 04 with Fig. 06 you'll see some
differences that are worth noting.
-
There is no difference between the C: partitions. Both are 4.88 GB, NTFS Primary partitions designated as System.
-
Once the first partition has been created, in this case C:, subsequent partitions created will be placed within an Extended partition and created as Logical drives. In the screen capture below they are identified by the brighter blue color and assigned drive letters E: and F:. You have no control over the drive letter assignment nor the fact the partitions will be logical drives.
-
Once an Extended partition has been created any Unpartitioned space left on the drive will no longer be left as Unallocated as in Fig. 04 above, but will now be identified as Free Space and contained within the Extended partition. Again, you have no option available to modify this default behavior.
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