Difference between Windows 2003 Basic and Dynamic disks
Windows 2003 supports two storage types; Basic disks and Dynamic Disks.
Basic Disks
Basic storage uses normal partition
tables supported by MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows 95, Microsoft Windows 98,
Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition (Me), Microsoft Windows NT,
Microsoft Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP. A disk
initialized for basic storage is called a basic disk. A basic disk can
have up to four primary partitions or up to three primary partitions and
one extended partition. Each primary partition is represented with one
logical volume. Each extended partition is represented by one or more
logical drives.
Dynamic Disks
Dynamic storage is available in
Windows XP Professional, Windows 2000 and Windows 2003 Server. A disk
initialized for dynamic storage is called a dynamic disk. A dynamic disk
contains dynamic volumes, such as simple volumes, spanned volumes,
striped volumes, mirrored volumes, and RAID-5 volumes.
With dynamic disks, we can create
fault tolerant volumes. Non-fault tolerant volumes provide no data
redundancy. If a non-fault tolerant drive fails, the data can be
recovered only from backup. Fault tolerant volumes provide data
redundancy. If a fault tolerant drive fails, you can rebuild the volume
without having to recover data from backup.
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