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<p>No operating system can be installed to an exFAT partition, so such partitions can only be used for data storage. Due to lack of journaling and support for huge files, exFAT is a good filesystem on Solid State Drives and thumb drives that are only used within Windows Vista and/or 7.</p> |
<p>No operating system can be installed to an exFAT partition, so such partitions can only be used for data storage. Due to lack of journaling and support for huge files, exFAT is a good filesystem on Solid State Drives and thumb drives that are only used within Windows Vista and/or 7.</p> |
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366 |
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<H3><a name="annex-b-list"></a>Partition list <span class="hideprint">[<a href="#annex-b-top" title="go to top of the page">^</a>]</span></H3> |
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<p>The following table presents known partition types along with their IDs:</p> |
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<p class="newcode" style="margin-right: 0;"> 0 Empty 80 Old Minix<br> |
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1 FAT12 81 Minix / old Linux<br> |
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2 XENIX root <font color="Red">82 Linux swap / Solaris</font><br> |
374 |
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3 XENIX usr <font color="Green">83 Linux</font><br> |
375 |
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4 FAT16 <32M 84 OS/2 hidden C: drive<br> |
376 |
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5 Extended 85 Linux extended<br> |
377 |
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<font color="Red">6 FAT16</font> 86 NTFS volume set<br> |
378 |
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<font color="Green">7 HPFS/NTFS</font> 87 NTFS volume set<br> |
379 |
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8 AIX 88 Linux plaintext<br> |
380 |
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9 AIX bootable 8e Linux LVM<br> |
381 |
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a OS/2 Boot Manager 93 Amoeba<br> |
382 |
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b W95 FAT32 94 Amoeba BBT<br> |
383 |
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<font color="Red">c W95 FAT32 (LBA)</font> 9f BSD/OS<br> |
384 |
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e W95 FAT16 (LBA) a0 IBM Thinkpad hibernation<br> |
385 |
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<font color="Green">f W95 Ext'd (LBA)</font> a5 FreeBSD<br> |
386 |
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10 OPUS a6 OpenBSD<br> |
387 |
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11 Hidden FAT12 a7 NeXTSTEP<br> |
388 |
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12 Compaq diagnostics a8 Darwin UFS<br> |
389 |
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14 Hidden FAT16 <32M a9 NetBSD<br> |
390 |
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16 Hidden FAT16 ab Darwin boot<br> |
391 |
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17 Hidden HPFS/NTFS b7 BSDI fs<br> |
392 |
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18 AST SmartSleep b8 BSDI swap<br> |
393 |
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1b Hidden W95 FAT32 bb Boot Wizard hidden<br> |
394 |
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1c Hidden W95 FAT32 (LBA) be Solaris boot<br> |
395 |
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1e Hidden W95 FAT16 (LBA) bf Solaris<br> |
396 |
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24 NEC DOS c1 DRDOS/sec (FAT-12)<br> |
397 |
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39 Plan 9 c4 DRDOS/sec (FAT-16 < 32M)<br> |
398 |
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3c PartitionMagic recovery c6 DRDOS/sec (FAT-16)<br> |
399 |
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40 Venix 80286 c7 Syrinx<br> |
400 |
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41 PPC PReP Boot da Non-FS data<br> |
401 |
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42 SFS db CP/M / CTOS / ...<br> |
402 |
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4d QNX4.x de Dell Utility<br> |
403 |
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4e QNX4.x 2nd part df BootIt<br> |
404 |
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4f QNX4.x 3rd part e1 DOS access<br> |
405 |
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50 OnTrack DM e3 DOS R/O<br> |
406 |
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51 OnTrack DM6 Aux1 e4 SpeedStor<br> |
407 |
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52 CP/M eb BeOS fs<br> |
408 |
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53 OnTrack DM6 Aux3 ee EFI GPT<br> |
409 |
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54 OnTrackDM6 ef EFI (FAT-12/16/32)<br> |
410 |
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55 EZ-Drive f0 Linux/PA-RISC boot<br> |
411 |
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56 Golden Bow f1 SpeedStor<br> |
412 |
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5c Priam Edisk f4 SpeedStor<br> |
413 |
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61 SpeedStor f2 DOS secondary<br> |
414 |
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63 GNU HURD or SysV fd Linux raid autodetect<br> |
415 |
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64 Novell Netware 286 fe LANstep<br> |
416 |
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65 Novell Netware 386 ff BBT<br> |
417 |
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70 DiskSecure Multi-Boot<br> |
418 |
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75 PC/IX</p> |
419 |
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<p>The partitions you are most likely to see in use, are:</p> |
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<ul> |
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<li><b><font color="Red">FAT16 (ID = 6) </font></b><br> |
424 |
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This is the old DOS partition type<br> |
425 |
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You may still find it in pure DOS installations, like vendor diagnostics tool partitions, and small USB sticks (128 - 250 MB)</li> |
426 |
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|
427 |
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<li><b><font color="Green">HPFS/NTFS (ID = 7)</font></b><br> |
428 |
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This is the <b>Windows XP</b> partition, also known as <b>NTFS</b></li> |
429 |
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|
430 |
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<li><b><font color="Red">W95 FAT32 (LBA) (ID = c)</font></b><br> |
431 |
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This is the <b>Windows 95 - 98</b> partition<br> |
432 |
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It is used in any kind of disk and large USB devices (1 GB and more)</li> |
433 |
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|
434 |
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<li><b><font color="Green">W95 Ext'd (LBA) (ID = f)</font></b><br> |
435 |
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Extended partition. It acts as a container for other partitions<br> |
436 |
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There is one more extended partition type (ID = 5), but it does not seem to be in use as much</li> |
437 |
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|
438 |
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<li><b><font color="Red">Linux swap / Solaris (ID = 82)</font></b><br> |
439 |
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Swap partition, acting as <b>Virtual Memory</b><br> |
440 |
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Modern computers with 1 - 2 GB of memory may not use it at all</li> |
441 |
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|
442 |
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<li><b><font color="Green">Linux (ID = 83)</font></b><br> |
443 |
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Linux partitions, such as <b>ext2</b>, <b>ext3</b> and <b>reiserfs</b></li> |
444 |
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</ul> |
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448 |
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449 |
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450 |
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<H2 style="margin-top: 15px;"><a name="example"></a>Partitioning example <span class="hideprint">[<a href="#partitions-top" title="go to top of the page">^</a>]</span></H2> |
<H2 style="margin-top: 15px;"><a name="example"></a>Partitioning example <span class="hideprint">[<a href="#partitions-top" title="go to top of the page">^</a>]</span></H2> |
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454 |
<p>This section contains a partitioning example. I simulate the following situation in a virtual machine:</p> |
<p>This section contains a partitioning example. I simulate the following situation in a virtual machine:</p> |
555 |
<p>It's a good idea to reboot the computer now and check if the distribution in <b>/dev/sda1</b> still works. Anyway, the disk should now be ready for the new distro.</p> |
<p>It's a good idea to reboot the computer now and check if the distribution in <b>/dev/sda1</b> still works. Anyway, the disk should now be ready for the new distro.</p> |
556 |
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557 |
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<H3><a name="annex-b-list"></a>Partition list <span class="hideprint">[<a href="#annex-b-top" title="go to top of the page">^</a>]</span></H3> |
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|
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<p>The following table presents known partition types along with their IDs:</p> |
|
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|
|
|
<p class="newcode" style="margin-right: 0;"> 0 Empty 80 Old Minix<br> |
|
|
1 FAT12 81 Minix / old Linux<br> |
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2 XENIX root <font color="Red">82 Linux swap / Solaris</font><br> |
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3 XENIX usr <font color="Green">83 Linux</font><br> |
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4 FAT16 <32M 84 OS/2 hidden C: drive<br> |
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5 Extended 85 Linux extended<br> |
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<font color="Red">6 FAT16</font> 86 NTFS volume set<br> |
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<font color="Green">7 HPFS/NTFS</font> 87 NTFS volume set<br> |
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8 AIX 88 Linux plaintext<br> |
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9 AIX bootable 8e Linux LVM<br> |
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a OS/2 Boot Manager 93 Amoeba<br> |
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b W95 FAT32 94 Amoeba BBT<br> |
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<font color="Red">c W95 FAT32 (LBA)</font> 9f BSD/OS<br> |
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e W95 FAT16 (LBA) a0 IBM Thinkpad hibernation<br> |
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<font color="Green">f W95 Ext'd (LBA)</font> a5 FreeBSD<br> |
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10 OPUS a6 OpenBSD<br> |
|
|
11 Hidden FAT12 a7 NeXTSTEP<br> |
|
|
12 Compaq diagnostics a8 Darwin UFS<br> |
|
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14 Hidden FAT16 <32M a9 NetBSD<br> |
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16 Hidden FAT16 ab Darwin boot<br> |
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17 Hidden HPFS/NTFS b7 BSDI fs<br> |
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18 AST SmartSleep b8 BSDI swap<br> |
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1b Hidden W95 FAT32 bb Boot Wizard hidden<br> |
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|
1c Hidden W95 FAT32 (LBA) be Solaris boot<br> |
|
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1e Hidden W95 FAT16 (LBA) bf Solaris<br> |
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24 NEC DOS c1 DRDOS/sec (FAT-12)<br> |
|
|
39 Plan 9 c4 DRDOS/sec (FAT-16 < 32M)<br> |
|
|
3c PartitionMagic recovery c6 DRDOS/sec (FAT-16)<br> |
|
|
40 Venix 80286 c7 Syrinx<br> |
|
|
41 PPC PReP Boot da Non-FS data<br> |
|
|
42 SFS db CP/M / CTOS / ...<br> |
|
|
4d QNX4.x de Dell Utility<br> |
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|
4e QNX4.x 2nd part df BootIt<br> |
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4f QNX4.x 3rd part e1 DOS access<br> |
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50 OnTrack DM e3 DOS R/O<br> |
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51 OnTrack DM6 Aux1 e4 SpeedStor<br> |
|
|
52 CP/M eb BeOS fs<br> |
|
|
53 OnTrack DM6 Aux3 ee EFI GPT<br> |
|
|
54 OnTrackDM6 ef EFI (FAT-12/16/32)<br> |
|
|
55 EZ-Drive f0 Linux/PA-RISC boot<br> |
|
|
56 Golden Bow f1 SpeedStor<br> |
|
|
5c Priam Edisk f4 SpeedStor<br> |
|
|
61 SpeedStor f2 DOS secondary<br> |
|
|
63 GNU HURD or SysV fd Linux raid autodetect<br> |
|
|
64 Novell Netware 286 fe LANstep<br> |
|
|
65 Novell Netware 386 ff BBT<br> |
|
|
70 DiskSecure Multi-Boot<br> |
|
|
75 PC/IX</p> |
|
|
|
|
|
<p>The partitions you are most likely to see in use, are:</p> |
|
|
|
|
|
<ul> |
|
|
<li><b><font color="Red">FAT16 (ID = 6) </font></b><br> |
|
|
This is the old DOS partition type<br> |
|
|
You may still find it in pure DOS installations, like vendor diagnostics tool partitions, and small USB sticks (128 - 250 MB)</li> |
|
|
|
|
|
<li><b><font color="Green">HPFS/NTFS (ID = 7)</font></b><br> |
|
|
This is the <b>Windows XP</b> partition, also known as <b>NTFS</b></li> |
|
|
|
|
|
<li><b><font color="Red">W95 FAT32 (LBA) (ID = c)</font></b><br> |
|
|
This is the <b>Windows 95 - 98</b> partition<br> |
|
|
It is used in any kind of disk and large USB devices (1 GB and more)</li> |
|
|
|
|
|
<li><b><font color="Green">W95 Ext'd (LBA) (ID = f)</font></b><br> |
|
|
Extended partition. It acts as a container for other partitions<br> |
|
|
There is one more extended partition type (ID = 5), but it does not seem to be in use as much</li> |
|
|
|
|
|
<li><b><font color="Red">Linux swap / Solaris (ID = 82)</font></b><br> |
|
|
Swap partition, acting as <b>Virtual Memory</b><br> |
|
|
Modern computers with 1 - 2 GB of memory may not use it at all</li> |
|
|
|
|
|
<li><b><font color="Green">Linux (ID = 83)</font></b><br> |
|
|
Linux partitions, such as <b>ext2</b>, <b>ext3</b> and <b>reiserfs</b></li> |
|
|
</ul> |
|
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|
|
|
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|
558 |
</div> |
</div> |
559 |
<div id="footer"> |
<div id="footer"> |
560 |
<p>Copyright: © <a href="mailto:sng@hellug.gr?subject=About Clonezilla-SysRescCD v "myVersion"">Spiros Georgaras</a>, 2007-2010<br /><br/> |
<p>Copyright: © <a href="mailto:sng@hellug.gr?subject=About Clonezilla-SysRescCD v "myVersion"">Spiros Georgaras</a>, 2007-2010<br /><br/> |