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Windows XP/2000 - partitioning unallocated space posted in the Operating Systems forums; Hello I’m trying to create 1 partition from free space and unallocated space with Disk Management in Windows XP but it will not let me, it will only create 2 ...


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Old 02-26-2009   #1
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Default partitioning unallocated space

Hello
I’m trying to create 1 partition from free space and unallocated space with Disk Management in Windows XP but it will not let me, it will only create 2 partitions.


What is the difference between free space and unallocated space? I see that it (unallocated space) is not part of the extended partition. is that part of the problem?
free space = extended partiton
unallocted = (not part of any partition?)
and if that is part of the problem how can I extend the extended partition? maybe this makes more sense
"How can I add the unallocated space to the extended partition"?
Thanks

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Old 02-26-2009   #2
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Default Re: partitioning unallocated space

Hello you cannot do this in XP you need a third party software like this:
gparted software downloads and reviews - CNET Downloads
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Old 02-26-2009   #3
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Default Re: partitioning unallocated space

Thank you very much for the help


Hello you cannot do this in XP you need a third party software like this


I would like to understand:
What is the difference between free space and unallocated space?
and why is it not possible to delete the free space and create 1 drive from the remaing unallocated space?

Thanks again.
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Old 02-26-2009   #4
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Default Re: partitioning unallocated space

Well did you give the unallocated space a drive letter first then format?

Unallocated space, sometimes called “free space”, is logical space on a hard drive that the operating system, e.g Windows, can write to. To put it another way it is the opposite of “allocated” space, which is where the operating system has already written files to.

Examples.
If the operating system writes a file to a certain space on the hard drive that part of the drive is now “allocated”, as the file is using it the space, and no other files can be written to that section. If that file is deleted then that part of the hard drive is no longer required to be “allocated” it becomes unallocated. This means that new files can now be re-written to that location.
On a standard, working computer, files can only be written to the unallocated space.
If a newly formatted drive is connected to a computer, virtually all of the drive space is unallocated space (a small amount of space will be taken up by files within the file system, e.g $MFT, etc). On a new drive the unallocated space is normally zeros, as files are written to the hard drive the zeros are over written with the file data.

Blank Drive
A freshly formatted (NTFS) 500 GB hard drive starts with 99.9% unallocated space; we will assume its 100% to make the maths slightly easier. All of the unallocated space will be zeros, literally 00 00 00 written on the hard drives.
If a 5 GB file, e.g a large movie, is placed on the drive, then there will be 1% (5 GB) allocated space and 99% unallocated (495 GB)
If a 10 GB database file is now added to this hard drive there will be a total of 3 % (15 GB) of allocated space and 485 GB unallocated space. New files will only be written into the remaining unallocated space.
What happens when a file is deleted?
If the movie file, from the above example, is deleted the allocated space it was using will now become unallocated. I.e There will now be 2% allocated space (the 10 GB database) and 98% unallocated space.
However the data from the movie file is still on the hard drive, it does not just disappear, it just changes its status. This means that the following situation now exists:
There is 10 GB of allocated space and 490 GB of unallocated space.
Of the 490 GB, 485 GB would be all zeros, however 5 GB of the unallocated space would be the old movie data.
Until new files are written to the hard drive this movie file will remain deleted but still recoverable from the hard drive. Even if new files are written it must overwrite the same unallocated space as the movie file, before the movie file is destroyed.
Unallocated space can only be accessed by specialist tools, and now directly from Windows.
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