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| Re: Partitioning RAID 0 Drives "Seidell23231" <Seidell23231@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:F07C919D-7FDD-4538-A19C-0AC9017D4C9E@microsoft.com...[color=blue] > Regarding Partitions, are they allowed on a RAID 0 HD? If yes, does the > 2nd > drive have to be partiitioned the same way? Thanks! > >[/color] A RAID array acts as one drive. You can partition as you like. There is no way to partition each drive separately. The OS doesn't see the individual drives. -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience [url]http://www.vistahelp.ca/phpBB2/[/url] |
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| Re: Partitioning RAID 0 Drives Yes. If you create an array, it shows up as a single drive. You partition it as a single drive; you don't do anything to the individual physical drives. For example: I have 3 partitions on my RAID 10 array. It is made up of 4 physical drives. Return address scrambled. Replace nkbob with bobkn. "Seidell23231" <Seidell23231@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:F07C919D-7FDD-4538-A19C-0AC9017D4C9E@microsoft.com...[color=blue] > Regarding Partitions, are they allowed on a RAID 0 HD? If yes, does the > 2nd > drive have to be partiitioned the same way? Thanks! > >[/color] |
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| Re: Partitioning RAID 0 Drives Hey Guys, OK so your partitions are created where? via Computer Management Console? Question, I use to have drive C with just the OS and essentials. Than I had my seperate drives with different agendas. But with RAID, in order for it to get the best bang for the buck, I will need to store almost everything on the C drive (1st drive in the RAID). Am I getting this right, or should I go back to the drawing board? Thanks for your time and help, ~~~ "Bob Knowlden" wrote: [color=blue] > Yes. > > If you create an array, it shows up as a single drive. You partition it as a > single drive; you don't do anything to the individual physical drives. > > For example: I have 3 partitions on my RAID 10 array. It is made up of 4 > physical drives. > > > Return address scrambled. Replace nkbob with bobkn. > > "Seidell23231" <Seidell23231@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:F07C919D-7FDD-4538-A19C-0AC9017D4C9E@microsoft.com...[color=green] > > Regarding Partitions, are they allowed on a RAID 0 HD? If yes, does the > > 2nd > > drive have to be partiitioned the same way? Thanks! > > > >[/color] > >[/color] |
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| Re: Partitioning RAID 0 Drives I would have multiple partitions on raid-10. Though on a raid-0 with just two physical drives I think I would choose one big partition unless it was to big to be created through the os. :) "Bob Knowlden" wrote: [color=blue] > Yes. > > If you create an array, it shows up as a single drive. You partition it as a > single drive; you don't do anything to the individual physical drives. > > For example: I have 3 partitions on my RAID 10 array. It is made up of 4 > physical drives. > > > Return address scrambled. Replace nkbob with bobkn. > > "Seidell23231" <Seidell23231@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:F07C919D-7FDD-4538-A19C-0AC9017D4C9E@microsoft.com...[color=green] > > Regarding Partitions, are they allowed on a RAID 0 HD? If yes, does the > > 2nd > > drive have to be partiitioned the same way? Thanks! > > > >[/color] > >[/color] |
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| Re: Partitioning RAID 0 Drives On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 21:26:00 -0800, Seidell23231 <Seidell23231@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: [color=blue] > Regarding Partitions, are they allowed on a RAID 0 HD? If yes, does the 2nd > drive have to be partiitioned the same way? Thanks![/color] There is no "second" drive. You effectively have a single drive. That's what happens with RAID. From a Windows standpoint, you have a single drive that's just like a real single drive. You can have multiple partitions on it, just like on a real physical drive. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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| Re: Partitioning RAID 0 Drives Let me repeat: a RAID array appears to Windows as a single drive. That's independent of how many physical drives make up the array. You can set up the whole capacity as the C drive if you like. That's true whether the array is a 2 disk RAID 0 array, or 6 disks in RAID 5. (Incidentally: if you're creating a RAID 0 array from two drives, the capacity of the array will be twice that of the smaller of the two drives. It's best that the drives be the same size, so that none of the capacity will be unused.) You create and format a partition during the Vista installation. If you want multiple partitions, you size the installation partition accordingly. I believe that I created and formatted the other partitions later, using the disk management utility. (That's under the "administrative tools" control panel, computer management, disk management.) This is exactly like you'd do with a single drive. "Seidell23231" <Seidell23231@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:2F2ED079-17B4-4E4B-9679-7C149B0191D2@microsoft.com...[color=blue] > Hey Guys, OK so your partitions are created where? via Computer > Management > Console? Question, I use to have drive C with just the OS and essentials. > Than I had my seperate drives with different agendas. But with RAID, in > order for it to get the best bang for the buck, I will need to store > almost > everything on the C drive (1st drive in the RAID). Am I getting this > right, > or should I go back to the drawing board? > > Thanks for your time and help, ~~~ >[/color] |
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