Does anyone know if Win2k does a better job creating NTFS partitions on new installs than NT 4.0?
Let me explain. Under 4.0 when you create a new partition during install and format it as NTFS the setup actually formats it as FAT and runs CONVERT.EXE on the partition when the system reboots.
This is all fine, except, it puts the Master File Tables somewhere on the disk after all the temporary files when they should be at the start of the disk. The result is once those tables get fragmented performance starts to suck, bad. What you should do under 4.0 is install it on a clean, pre-formatted NTFS partition to guarantee the MFTs are at the start of the disk. See the link below for more information.
http://www.execsoft.com/tech-support/support-articles/NT/article.asp?F=1999102801.htm
I did a clean install of Win2k yesterday and it seemed not to run convert but I am not sure. Does anyone have any proof that when you create and format a new partition from setup it does it right, formatting it as NTFS from the get-go?
Let me explain. Under 4.0 when you create a new partition during install and format it as NTFS the setup actually formats it as FAT and runs CONVERT.EXE on the partition when the system reboots.
This is all fine, except, it puts the Master File Tables somewhere on the disk after all the temporary files when they should be at the start of the disk. The result is once those tables get fragmented performance starts to suck, bad. What you should do under 4.0 is install it on a clean, pre-formatted NTFS partition to guarantee the MFTs are at the start of the disk. See the link below for more information.
http://www.execsoft.com/tech-support/support-articles/NT/article.asp?F=1999102801.htm
I did a clean install of Win2k yesterday and it seemed not to run convert but I am not sure. Does anyone have any proof that when you create and format a new partition from setup it does it right, formatting it as NTFS from the get-go?
