Definition of System and Boot PartitionLast reviewed: March 24, 1997Article ID: Q100525 |
The information in this article applies to:
The names commonly used for the partitions containing Windows NT startup and operating system files, however unintuitive they may seem, are for the system and boot partitions, respectively.
System PartitionThe system partition refers to the disk volume containing hardware specific files needed to boot Windows NT (NTLDR, BOOT.INI, and so on). On Intel x86-based machines, it must be a primary partition that has been marked active. On x86 machines, this is always drive 0, the drive the system BIOS searches during system boot for the operating system.
Boot PartitionThe boot partition contains the Windows NT operating system files (usually \WINNT) and it support files (usually \WINNT\SYSTEM32). It can be the same partition as the system partition.
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Additional query words: prodnt
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