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Appendix A.  Partitions and file systems 
A.1 
Hard disk partitions 
The mechanism that allows you to install several operating systems on a single PC 
or to carve up a single physical disk drive into multiple “logical” disk drives is called 
partitioning
Partitioning is performed by special applications. In MS-DOS and Windows, these 
are FDISK and Disk Administrator.  
Partitioning programs perform the following: 
•  create a primary partition 
•  create an extended partition that can be split into several logical disks 
•  set an active partition (applied to a single primary partition only) 
 
Information about partitions on a hard disk is stored in a special disk area – in the 1
st
 sector 
of cylinder 0, head 0, which is called the partition table. This sector is called the master 
boot record, or MBR. 
 
A physical hard disk might contain up to four partitions. This limit is forced by the partition 
table that is suitable for four strings only. However, this does not mean you can have only 
four operating systems on your PC! Applications called disk managers support far more 
operating systems on disks.  
A.2 File 
systems 
An operating system gives the user the ability to work with data by supporting a 
certain type of file system on a partition. 
All file systems are made of structures that are necessary to store and manage 
data. These structures are usually composed of operating system boot sectors, 
folders and files. File systems perform the following basic functions: 
•  track occupied and free disk space (and bad sectors, if any) 
•  support folders and file names 
•  track physical location of files on disks 
Different operating systems use different file systems. Some operating systems are 
able to work with only one file system, while others can use several of them. Here 
are some of the most widely used file systems: 
A.2.1 FAT16 
The FAT16 file system is widely used by DOS (DR-DOS, MS-DOS, PC-DOS, 
PTS-DOS, etc.), Windows 98/Me, and Windows NT/2000/XP/Vista operating systems 
and is supported by most other systems. 
The main features of FAT16 are the file allocation table (FAT) and clusters. FAT is 
the core of the file system. To increase data safety, it is possible to have several 
copies of the FAT (there are usually two of them) on a single disk. A cluster is a 
minimum data storage unit in the FAT16 file system. One cluster contains a fixed 
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