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Which is better for keeping data primary partition or logical partition?

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Which is better for keeping data primary partition or logical partition?


Is it possible to move Ubuntu on a primary partition to a logical/extended partition?is it a good idea to change a recovery partition from primary to logical? [HP laptop]Removing extended partition without deleting logical in itCan not create logical partition on an external HDDConverting C:/ partition to Logical PartitionMake primary partition from unallocated space from extended partitionHow to change ext4 primary partition to logicalMerge extended partitions keeping logical partitions intactBasic Disk and Dynamic Disk vs. Primary Partition and Extended Partition and Logical PartitionUnable to convert logical partition to primary or create create a new primary partition






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








1















We have two options;



a. creating a primary partition (say D:) or



b. creating an extended partition, then create a logical partition (say D:) in the extended partition



In terms of data security, data loss or anything else, is there any difference, if we keep data in primary partition or if we keep data in logical partition?



Regards



FewL










share|improve this question
























  • Are you using the primary partition to install the operating system?

    – Nimesh Neema
    9 hours ago

















1















We have two options;



a. creating a primary partition (say D:) or



b. creating an extended partition, then create a logical partition (say D:) in the extended partition



In terms of data security, data loss or anything else, is there any difference, if we keep data in primary partition or if we keep data in logical partition?



Regards



FewL










share|improve this question
























  • Are you using the primary partition to install the operating system?

    – Nimesh Neema
    9 hours ago













1












1








1








We have two options;



a. creating a primary partition (say D:) or



b. creating an extended partition, then create a logical partition (say D:) in the extended partition



In terms of data security, data loss or anything else, is there any difference, if we keep data in primary partition or if we keep data in logical partition?



Regards



FewL










share|improve this question
















We have two options;



a. creating a primary partition (say D:) or



b. creating an extended partition, then create a logical partition (say D:) in the extended partition



In terms of data security, data loss or anything else, is there any difference, if we keep data in primary partition or if we keep data in logical partition?



Regards



FewL







hard-drive partitioning






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 8 hours ago









Tetsujin

17.4k5 gold badges39 silver badges65 bronze badges




17.4k5 gold badges39 silver badges65 bronze badges










asked 9 hours ago









user725162user725162

343 bronze badges




343 bronze badges












  • Are you using the primary partition to install the operating system?

    – Nimesh Neema
    9 hours ago

















  • Are you using the primary partition to install the operating system?

    – Nimesh Neema
    9 hours ago
















Are you using the primary partition to install the operating system?

– Nimesh Neema
9 hours ago





Are you using the primary partition to install the operating system?

– Nimesh Neema
9 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














No difference whatsoever.



For data loss-prevention, your only security is to never keep only one copy of anything.

There's an adage...




"Any data not stored in at lest three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary."




In short, that means one on-site backup & one off-site backup [in case the house burns down.]



Having all your eggs in one basket... it doesn't matter if you have two baskets, if you're carrying them both in the same hand.

Assuming data is 'safe' because it's on a different partition on the same physical drive, no matter how you format it, is 'all eggs in one basket'.






share|improve this answer























  • I observed tech steps followed by two tech guys. Windows 10 was installed in C: Using diskpart, extended partition was created, then a logical partition (D:) was created in extended partition. Both tech guys preferred to keep data in logical partition. I couldn’t understand why.

    – user725162
    8 hours ago






  • 1





    It's an old [& ultimately pointless] method to 'protect' your data in case you ever have to reinstall the OS. I honestly wouldn't bother with it, it offers no real protection from anything.

    – Tetsujin
    7 hours ago






  • 1





    @user725162, the reason may have nothing to do with security. As K7AAY describes, extended and logical partitions are used with MBR. MBR supports a maximum of 4 primary partitions. Using one of those for an extended partition allows you to exceed the limit by using logical partitions. When you start using recovery and other dedicated partitions, it's easy to use up the allowance of 4.

    – fixer1234
    5 hours ago


















3














If you are using a Logical Partition in an Extended Partition, then you are using the old-fashioned MBR Partition Tables which are limited to drives of 2TB or less. The current standard for Windows 10 is GPT Partition Tables which arrived with EFI and UEFI Booting. One poster tested and found better performance with GPT, and GPT has additional features which help protect your data better, transparantly. Microsoft has provided an article on conversion.



Therefore, storing your data on an MBR partitioned drive is less safe than a GPT partitioned drive, but Tetsujin's also very right, and I voted for his answer.






share|improve this answer

























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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    No difference whatsoever.



    For data loss-prevention, your only security is to never keep only one copy of anything.

    There's an adage...




    "Any data not stored in at lest three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary."




    In short, that means one on-site backup & one off-site backup [in case the house burns down.]



    Having all your eggs in one basket... it doesn't matter if you have two baskets, if you're carrying them both in the same hand.

    Assuming data is 'safe' because it's on a different partition on the same physical drive, no matter how you format it, is 'all eggs in one basket'.






    share|improve this answer























    • I observed tech steps followed by two tech guys. Windows 10 was installed in C: Using diskpart, extended partition was created, then a logical partition (D:) was created in extended partition. Both tech guys preferred to keep data in logical partition. I couldn’t understand why.

      – user725162
      8 hours ago






    • 1





      It's an old [& ultimately pointless] method to 'protect' your data in case you ever have to reinstall the OS. I honestly wouldn't bother with it, it offers no real protection from anything.

      – Tetsujin
      7 hours ago






    • 1





      @user725162, the reason may have nothing to do with security. As K7AAY describes, extended and logical partitions are used with MBR. MBR supports a maximum of 4 primary partitions. Using one of those for an extended partition allows you to exceed the limit by using logical partitions. When you start using recovery and other dedicated partitions, it's easy to use up the allowance of 4.

      – fixer1234
      5 hours ago















    3














    No difference whatsoever.



    For data loss-prevention, your only security is to never keep only one copy of anything.

    There's an adage...




    "Any data not stored in at lest three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary."




    In short, that means one on-site backup & one off-site backup [in case the house burns down.]



    Having all your eggs in one basket... it doesn't matter if you have two baskets, if you're carrying them both in the same hand.

    Assuming data is 'safe' because it's on a different partition on the same physical drive, no matter how you format it, is 'all eggs in one basket'.






    share|improve this answer























    • I observed tech steps followed by two tech guys. Windows 10 was installed in C: Using diskpart, extended partition was created, then a logical partition (D:) was created in extended partition. Both tech guys preferred to keep data in logical partition. I couldn’t understand why.

      – user725162
      8 hours ago






    • 1





      It's an old [& ultimately pointless] method to 'protect' your data in case you ever have to reinstall the OS. I honestly wouldn't bother with it, it offers no real protection from anything.

      – Tetsujin
      7 hours ago






    • 1





      @user725162, the reason may have nothing to do with security. As K7AAY describes, extended and logical partitions are used with MBR. MBR supports a maximum of 4 primary partitions. Using one of those for an extended partition allows you to exceed the limit by using logical partitions. When you start using recovery and other dedicated partitions, it's easy to use up the allowance of 4.

      – fixer1234
      5 hours ago













    3












    3








    3







    No difference whatsoever.



    For data loss-prevention, your only security is to never keep only one copy of anything.

    There's an adage...




    "Any data not stored in at lest three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary."




    In short, that means one on-site backup & one off-site backup [in case the house burns down.]



    Having all your eggs in one basket... it doesn't matter if you have two baskets, if you're carrying them both in the same hand.

    Assuming data is 'safe' because it's on a different partition on the same physical drive, no matter how you format it, is 'all eggs in one basket'.






    share|improve this answer













    No difference whatsoever.



    For data loss-prevention, your only security is to never keep only one copy of anything.

    There's an adage...




    "Any data not stored in at lest three distinct locations ought to be considered temporary."




    In short, that means one on-site backup & one off-site backup [in case the house burns down.]



    Having all your eggs in one basket... it doesn't matter if you have two baskets, if you're carrying them both in the same hand.

    Assuming data is 'safe' because it's on a different partition on the same physical drive, no matter how you format it, is 'all eggs in one basket'.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 8 hours ago









    TetsujinTetsujin

    17.4k5 gold badges39 silver badges65 bronze badges




    17.4k5 gold badges39 silver badges65 bronze badges












    • I observed tech steps followed by two tech guys. Windows 10 was installed in C: Using diskpart, extended partition was created, then a logical partition (D:) was created in extended partition. Both tech guys preferred to keep data in logical partition. I couldn’t understand why.

      – user725162
      8 hours ago






    • 1





      It's an old [& ultimately pointless] method to 'protect' your data in case you ever have to reinstall the OS. I honestly wouldn't bother with it, it offers no real protection from anything.

      – Tetsujin
      7 hours ago






    • 1





      @user725162, the reason may have nothing to do with security. As K7AAY describes, extended and logical partitions are used with MBR. MBR supports a maximum of 4 primary partitions. Using one of those for an extended partition allows you to exceed the limit by using logical partitions. When you start using recovery and other dedicated partitions, it's easy to use up the allowance of 4.

      – fixer1234
      5 hours ago

















    • I observed tech steps followed by two tech guys. Windows 10 was installed in C: Using diskpart, extended partition was created, then a logical partition (D:) was created in extended partition. Both tech guys preferred to keep data in logical partition. I couldn’t understand why.

      – user725162
      8 hours ago






    • 1





      It's an old [& ultimately pointless] method to 'protect' your data in case you ever have to reinstall the OS. I honestly wouldn't bother with it, it offers no real protection from anything.

      – Tetsujin
      7 hours ago






    • 1





      @user725162, the reason may have nothing to do with security. As K7AAY describes, extended and logical partitions are used with MBR. MBR supports a maximum of 4 primary partitions. Using one of those for an extended partition allows you to exceed the limit by using logical partitions. When you start using recovery and other dedicated partitions, it's easy to use up the allowance of 4.

      – fixer1234
      5 hours ago
















    I observed tech steps followed by two tech guys. Windows 10 was installed in C: Using diskpart, extended partition was created, then a logical partition (D:) was created in extended partition. Both tech guys preferred to keep data in logical partition. I couldn’t understand why.

    – user725162
    8 hours ago





    I observed tech steps followed by two tech guys. Windows 10 was installed in C: Using diskpart, extended partition was created, then a logical partition (D:) was created in extended partition. Both tech guys preferred to keep data in logical partition. I couldn’t understand why.

    – user725162
    8 hours ago




    1




    1





    It's an old [& ultimately pointless] method to 'protect' your data in case you ever have to reinstall the OS. I honestly wouldn't bother with it, it offers no real protection from anything.

    – Tetsujin
    7 hours ago





    It's an old [& ultimately pointless] method to 'protect' your data in case you ever have to reinstall the OS. I honestly wouldn't bother with it, it offers no real protection from anything.

    – Tetsujin
    7 hours ago




    1




    1





    @user725162, the reason may have nothing to do with security. As K7AAY describes, extended and logical partitions are used with MBR. MBR supports a maximum of 4 primary partitions. Using one of those for an extended partition allows you to exceed the limit by using logical partitions. When you start using recovery and other dedicated partitions, it's easy to use up the allowance of 4.

    – fixer1234
    5 hours ago





    @user725162, the reason may have nothing to do with security. As K7AAY describes, extended and logical partitions are used with MBR. MBR supports a maximum of 4 primary partitions. Using one of those for an extended partition allows you to exceed the limit by using logical partitions. When you start using recovery and other dedicated partitions, it's easy to use up the allowance of 4.

    – fixer1234
    5 hours ago













    3














    If you are using a Logical Partition in an Extended Partition, then you are using the old-fashioned MBR Partition Tables which are limited to drives of 2TB or less. The current standard for Windows 10 is GPT Partition Tables which arrived with EFI and UEFI Booting. One poster tested and found better performance with GPT, and GPT has additional features which help protect your data better, transparantly. Microsoft has provided an article on conversion.



    Therefore, storing your data on an MBR partitioned drive is less safe than a GPT partitioned drive, but Tetsujin's also very right, and I voted for his answer.






    share|improve this answer



























      3














      If you are using a Logical Partition in an Extended Partition, then you are using the old-fashioned MBR Partition Tables which are limited to drives of 2TB or less. The current standard for Windows 10 is GPT Partition Tables which arrived with EFI and UEFI Booting. One poster tested and found better performance with GPT, and GPT has additional features which help protect your data better, transparantly. Microsoft has provided an article on conversion.



      Therefore, storing your data on an MBR partitioned drive is less safe than a GPT partitioned drive, but Tetsujin's also very right, and I voted for his answer.






      share|improve this answer

























        3












        3








        3







        If you are using a Logical Partition in an Extended Partition, then you are using the old-fashioned MBR Partition Tables which are limited to drives of 2TB or less. The current standard for Windows 10 is GPT Partition Tables which arrived with EFI and UEFI Booting. One poster tested and found better performance with GPT, and GPT has additional features which help protect your data better, transparantly. Microsoft has provided an article on conversion.



        Therefore, storing your data on an MBR partitioned drive is less safe than a GPT partitioned drive, but Tetsujin's also very right, and I voted for his answer.






        share|improve this answer













        If you are using a Logical Partition in an Extended Partition, then you are using the old-fashioned MBR Partition Tables which are limited to drives of 2TB or less. The current standard for Windows 10 is GPT Partition Tables which arrived with EFI and UEFI Booting. One poster tested and found better performance with GPT, and GPT has additional features which help protect your data better, transparantly. Microsoft has provided an article on conversion.



        Therefore, storing your data on an MBR partitioned drive is less safe than a GPT partitioned drive, but Tetsujin's also very right, and I voted for his answer.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 8 hours ago









        K7AAYK7AAY

        4,1842 gold badges16 silver badges41 bronze badges




        4,1842 gold badges16 silver badges41 bronze badges



























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