how to tell what non-dos partitions are for?
Hi Gentlepeople,
Suppose you want to FDISK a machine
- What if you find a non-DOS partition, either active or not, and you don’t know why it exists?
- What if you find a small DOS partition, either active or not, and you don't know why it exists?
Whatever you find, you must find out why it is there.
So guys, here is the question.
what can it be for??
and what are the telltales?
Esteemed Doctors, you may help a lot of people with your imput.
for instance, It can be an overlay as used on older machines.
An overlay may even be a small DOS part??
(in the old days, many larger drives had the utility on them, and booted as a floppy. During the overlay creation process, a real floppy was made)
What does an overlay in older and current drives look like?
We are already aware of this article. http://support.microsoft.com/support.../Q186/0/57.ASP
whatever you see, it can also be an NTFS or Linux partition.
How do we find out?
And it can be a suspend to disk partition as found in many notebooks, and some desktops.
what are the telltales here?
The last ones I can think of, and IMHO the more dangerous to wipe, are a drive tattoo
(does that use a small partition? Where will a tattoo be found?) or a small partition where BIOS is copied onto.
once again, how do we find out?
so here it is. WHY is it there???.
and how does one find out what is in there...
there are reasons for this topic.
For instance, months ago VDr helped a guy.
at one point he found a 7 MB part after he had botched a win2000 installation and wanted back to win98.
We never learned what that little part was for, nor how it got there...
oh yeah, RTFM https://discussions.virtualdr.com/
it may not be available...
thanks,
Jaak, et al
[This message has been edited by jtdoom (edited 05-18-2001).]