- Oct 28, 2003
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Please direct me to the correct forum, if this one is incorrect.
First, I tried searching the forums for my specific question and I was unable to find the information I need/want.
How does hard drive partitioning actually keep data seperate on the hard drive?
For example:
PC using Windows XP/Xp 64
200GB hard drive:
Example 1: Entire hard drive is single partition. Windows writes data all over the place, because hard drive spins faster than data can actually be written to it. So data is spread across several sectors. (Please correct me on this, or fill in the details.)
Example 2: 100GB partition to install os, and all software, 100 gb partition to save videos, pictures, music etc to. (Does Windows still write to both partitions physicaly, but just tells you logically it is all on one partition? Or does it actually make sure it writes to the correct sectors of the hard drive assigned to that partition? IE running a bootable disk clean utility one could safely erase erase the storage partition, without screwing up the one the OS and programs are installed to, or could that cause corruption?)
I have more questions to ask, once I have the initial question answered.
But basically I was wondering how much of a performance hit, it would create, or if it would be beneficial to overall system health, if I did the following:
1. Create an OS only partition on Harddrive. Only install device drivers, and windows patches to this partition.
2. Create a default download partition, so that everything I download from the web hits one section first.
3. Install every game I want to play, (world of warcraft, Call of duty 2, etc) onto it's own individual partition, (leaving enough room for patches, expansions of course, in the case of games like WoW.
4. All other programs, would each get their own partition.
So using the 200GB drive example:
10GB (OS, and drives.)
100 GB(Downloads, and storage)
18 x 5GB partitions for individual programs, (numbers could be adjusted, I am thinking a program like partition magic)
All the thanks ahead of time, and more to follow, for some friendly discussion, and expert advise.
First, I tried searching the forums for my specific question and I was unable to find the information I need/want.
How does hard drive partitioning actually keep data seperate on the hard drive?
For example:
PC using Windows XP/Xp 64
200GB hard drive:
Example 1: Entire hard drive is single partition. Windows writes data all over the place, because hard drive spins faster than data can actually be written to it. So data is spread across several sectors. (Please correct me on this, or fill in the details.)
Example 2: 100GB partition to install os, and all software, 100 gb partition to save videos, pictures, music etc to. (Does Windows still write to both partitions physicaly, but just tells you logically it is all on one partition? Or does it actually make sure it writes to the correct sectors of the hard drive assigned to that partition? IE running a bootable disk clean utility one could safely erase erase the storage partition, without screwing up the one the OS and programs are installed to, or could that cause corruption?)
I have more questions to ask, once I have the initial question answered.
But basically I was wondering how much of a performance hit, it would create, or if it would be beneficial to overall system health, if I did the following:
1. Create an OS only partition on Harddrive. Only install device drivers, and windows patches to this partition.
2. Create a default download partition, so that everything I download from the web hits one section first.
3. Install every game I want to play, (world of warcraft, Call of duty 2, etc) onto it's own individual partition, (leaving enough room for patches, expansions of course, in the case of games like WoW.
4. All other programs, would each get their own partition.
So using the 200GB drive example:
10GB (OS, and drives.)
100 GB(Downloads, and storage)
18 x 5GB partitions for individual programs, (numbers could be adjusted, I am thinking a program like partition magic)
All the thanks ahead of time, and more to follow, for some friendly discussion, and expert advise.
