The Logical Disk Manager (LDM) is a hard disk partitioning system for Windows, developed by Microsoft and Veritas Software. It was introduced with the Windows 2000 operating system, and is also supported in Windows XP, Windows Server 2003 and Windows Vista.
| ID (GUID Partition Table and MBR Partition Table) | Description |
|---|---|
| GPT: 5808C8AA-7E8F-42E0-85D2-E1E90434CFB3 MBR: None | "metadata" partition. The area of the disc that is used for holding configuration data that describe the volumes that LDM manages. |
| GPT: AF9B60A0-1431-4F62-BC68-3311714A69AD MBR: 0x42 | "data" partition. The area of the disc that is used for holding LDM volumes themselves. |
Basic disks can be upgraded to dynamic disks, however when this is done the disk cannot easily be downgraded to a basic disk again. To perform a downgrade, data on the dynamic disk must first be backed up onto some other storage device. Second, the dynamic disk must be re-formatted as a basic disk (erasing all data). Finally, data from the backup must be copied back over to the newly re-formatted basic disk.
Dynamic disks provide the capability for software implementations of RAID. The main disadvantage of dynamic disks in Windows is that they can only be recognized under certain operating systems (Windows 2000 or later), or Linux (kernel version 2.4.8 or later). In addition, upgrading a basic disk to a dynamic disk can cause major problems.
Dynamic disks under Windows are provided with the use of databases stored on disk(s). The volumes are referred to as dynamic volumes. It is possible to have 2000 dynamic volumes per dynamic disk, but the maximum recommended by Microsoft is 32.
Computer file systems | DOS on IBM PC compatibles | Microsoft Windows
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It uses material from the
"Logical Disk Manager".
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