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A hard disk partition is defined as storage space on a hard drive. Most operating systems allow users to divide a hard disk into multiple partitions, making one physical hard disk into several smaller logical hard disks.
Reasons to Use Hard Disk Partitions
A user may decide to split a hard disk into multiple partitions in order to organize his data more effectively. On Microsoft Windows machines, it is common to store the OS and applications on one hard disk partition and user data on another hard disk partition. When a problem occurs with Microsoft Windows, the OS partition can be completely formatted and reinstalled without affecting the data partition.
A user may decide to split a hard disk into multiple partitions because smaller partitions often have smaller cluster sizes. Cluster size is the smallest chunk of data that a partition can store. A large partition might have a cluster size of 16KB. This means that a file with one character in it will occupy 16KB of space on the disk. In a smaller partition, that file might only require 4KB to store. This is a useful strategy if you are storing a large number of small files.
A user may have to split a large hard disk into multiple partitions if the hard disk is larger than the partition size supported by the operating system.
Further Reading: Repartition Hard Drive
Creating Hard Disk Partitions
Most operating systems use the 'fdisk' command to create hard disk partitions. Many operating systems also have graphical tools that accomplish the same task, such as EaseUS Partition Master.
Hard Disk Partitions and File Systems
You don't actually store data in hard disk partitions.
You store file systems in hard disk partitions and then you store data in these file systems.
Some operating systems blur the lines between partitions and file systems.
The Partition Table
Partition information is stored in the partition table, a reserved area at the beginning of a hard disk.
Extended Partitions
A standard partition table is only able to store information about four partitions. At one time this meant that a hard disk could have a maximum of four partitions.
To work around this limitation, extended partitions were created.
An extended partition stores information about other partitions. By using an extended partition, you can create many more than four partitions on your hard disk.
The four standard partitions are often called the primary partitions.
Partitions configured into an extended partition are often referred to as logical partitions.
Partition Types
When a partition is created, a special byte of data is written to record what type of partition it is.
Because one hard disk may be shared by multiple operating systems, operating systems tend to agree on the meaning of these values.
The table below lists some of the partition types in use.
Partition Number | Partition Type |
00 | Empty |
01 | DOS 12-bit FAT |
02 | XENIX root |
03 | XENIX usr |
04 | DOS 16-bit FAT <=32M |
05 | DOS Extended Partition |
06 | DOS 16-bit FAT >=32 |
07 | OS/2 HPFS, WinNT NTFS |
08 | AIX |
09 | AIX bootable |
0a | OS/2 Boot Manager |
0b | Win95 FAT32 |
0c | Win95 FAT32 (LBA) |
0e | Win95 FAT16 (LBA) |
0f | Win95 Extended (LBA) |
35 | OS/2 JFS |
39 | Plan 9 |
40 | Venix 80286 |
51 | Novell |
52 | Microport |
63 | Unix System V, Mach, GNU HURD |
64 | Novell Netware 286 |
65 | Novell Netware 386 |
75 | PIC/IX |
80 | MINIX until 1.4a |
81 | MINUX, Linux |
82 | Solaris X86, Linux swap |
83 | Linux native |
85 | Linux extended |
93 | Amoeba |
94 | Amoeba BBT |
a5 | FreeBSD, NetBSD, BSD/386, 386BSD |
a6 | OpenBSD |
a7 | NEXTSTEP |
b7 | BSDI BSD/386 filesystem |
b8 | BSDI BSD/386 swap |
be | Solaris 8 bootable |
bf | Solaris x86 |
c7 | Syrinx |
db | CP/M |
e1 | DOS access |
e3 | DOS R/O |
eb | BeOS BFS |
fb | VMWare filesystem |
fc | VMWare swap |
f2 | DOS secondary |
ff | Xenix Bad Block Table |
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Cici is the junior editor of the writing team of EaseUS. She accepted the systematic training on computers at EaseUS for over one year. Now, she wrote a lot of professional articles to help people resolve the issues of hard drive corruption, computer boot errors, and disk partition problems.
Written by Tracy King
Tracy became a member of the EaseUS content team in 2013. Being a technical writer for over 10 years, she is enthusiastic about sharing tips to assist readers in resolving complex issues in disk management, file transfer, PC & Mac performance optimization, etc., like an expert.
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