The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARY
During the installation of Windows NT, Setup determines the best
partitioning scheme to use based on the existing partition table entries
and where you choose to install Windows NT. Windows NT Setup restraints
restrict the boot partition of up to 4 GB. The limit may be smaller
depending on disk geometry. The actual value that is used as the limit is
whatever Setup believes to be 1024 cylinders worth of disk space.
Sometimes this is 1 GB, 2 GB, or 4 GB, but can be some other value
depending on the make, model, and configuration of the hard disk adapter
in use. This is the amount of space with which the text-mode portion of
the installation can work. From this amount, you can create partitions
that do not exceed 4 GB because the partition must first be formatted FAT
and this file system has a limit to 4 GB.
Q119497 Boot Partition Created During Setup Limited to 4 Gigabytes Q224526 Windows NT 4.0 Supports Maximum of 7.8-GB System PartitionThese articles explains rules you should consider before installing Windows NT on computers that contain large hardware RAID-5 drive arrays if you want to use the full contiguous capacity of these large arrays after Windows NT is installed. MORE INFORMATIONWhen you use a Hardware RAID-5 configuration, it is very important to understand how Windows NT partitions your drive during Setup in order to maintain maximum contiguous capacity of the large Array for user data after Windows NT is installed. Setup follows these rules: Rule 1If no partitions pre-exist on the drive, Setup makes the primary partition the size you specify for Windows NT (up to 4GB).Rule 2If a primary partition already exists, and you choose to install Windows NT in an unformatted free space, you are prompted for the size of the partition to create (up to 4 GB). After you choose the partition size, Setup creates the largest extended partition possible (up to 7.8 GB if using a 63 sectors/track, 255 tracks/cylinder translation scheme) and creates a logical drive within the extended partition of the size you choose. After Windows NT is installed, the unused extended partition space can be used for additional logical drives.Rule 3If a primary and extended partition already exist and free space in the extended partition is selected, Windows NT creates a new logical drive of the size specified by you.Rule 4If a primary and extended partition already exist and free space is available and selected outside of the extended partition, Windows NT creates another primary partition of the size the you choose (up to 4GB) for Windows NT to be installed in.There are two possible workarounds:
EXAMPLEYou have four 2-GB drives configured in a hardware RAID-5 configuration for a total capacity of 6 GB and want a 5.5-GB NTFS partition for user data after Windows NT is installed. You have MS-DOS pre-installed on a 250-MB primary partition prior to installing Windows NT and want to keep this intact. You decide to install Windows NT into a separate NTFS partition and create a 250-MB partition from free space during Windows NT Setup.Using rule 3 above, Windows NT creates an extended partition of 4 GB, then creates a 250-MB logical drive within to install Windows NT on. After Windows NT is installed, Disk Administrator shows the following:
The problem is that the 2 free spaces cannot be combined to equal the 5.5-GB partition space wanted for user data.Additional query words: smallbiz
Keywords : ntsetup ntfilesys |
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