DictionaryForumContacts

   English
Terms for subject Microsoft containing partition | all forms | exact matches only
EnglishGerman
active partitionaktive Partition (A partition from which a computer starts up. The active partition must be a primary partition on a basic disk. If you use Windows exclusively, the active partition can be the same as the system volume)
boot partitionStartpartition (The partition that contains the Windows operating system and its support files. The boot partition can be, but does not have to be, the same as the system partition)
directory partitionVerzeichnispartition (A contiguous subtree of Active Directory that is replicated as a unit to other domain controllers in the forest that contain a replica of the same subtree. In Active Directory, a single domain controller always holds at least three directory partitions: schema (class and attribute definitions for the directory), configuration (replication topology and related metadata), and domain (subtree that contains the per-domain objects for one domain). Domain controllers running Windows Server 2003 can also store one or more application directory partitions)
disk partitionDatenträgerpartition (A section of space on a physical disk that functions as if it were a separate disk)
EFI system partitionEFI-Systempartition (A small portion on a GUID partition table (GPT) disk that is formatted with the file allocation table (FAT) file system and contains the files necessary to start the computer and pass execution to an operating system which resides on another partition)
extended partitionerweiterte Partition (A type of partition that you can create only on basic master boot record (MBR) disks. Extended partitions are useful if you want to create more than four volumes on a basic MBR disk. Unlike primary partitions, you do not format an extended partition with a file system and then assign a drive letter to it. Instead, you create one or more logical drives within the extended partition. After you create a logical drive, you format it and assign it a drive letter. An MBR disk can have up to four primary partitions or three primary partitions, one extended partition, and multiple logical drives)
Extensible Firmware Interface system partitionExtensible Firmware Interface-Systempartition (A small portion on a GUID partition table (GPT) disk that is formatted with the file allocation table (FAT) file system and contains the files necessary to start the computer and pass execution to an operating system which resides on another partition)
GUID partition tableGUID-Partitionstabelle (A disk-partitioning scheme that is used by the Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI). GPT offers more advantages than master boot record (MBR) partitioning because it allows up to 128 partitions per disk, provides support for volumes up to 18 exabytes in size, allows primary and backup partition tables for redundancy, and supports unique disk and partition IDs (GUIDs))
hidden partitionversteckte Partition (A partition that is not visibly exposed to the user. To create a hidden partition, set the partition type to one not recognized by Windows)
horizontal partitioninghorizontale Partitionierung (To segment a single table into multiple tables based on selected rows)
index partitionIndexpartition (A logical portion of the search index)
Microsoft Reserved partitionMicrosoft Reserved-Partition (A required partition on every GUID partition table (GPT) disk. System components can allocate portions of the MSR partition into new partitions for their own use. For example, when you convert a basic GPT disk to dynamic, the system allocates a portion of the MSR partition to be used as the Logical Disk Manager (LDM) metadata partition. The MSR partition varies in size based on the size of the GPT disk. For disks smaller than 16 GB, the MSR partition is 32 MB. For disks larger than 16 GB, the MSR partition is 128 MB. The MSR partition is not visible in Disk Management, and you cannot store data on the MSR partition or delete it)
MSR partitionMSR-Partition (A required partition on every GUID partition table (GPT) disk. System components can allocate portions of the MSR partition into new partitions for their own use. For example, when you convert a basic GPT disk to dynamic, the system allocates a portion of the MSR partition to be used as the Logical Disk Manager (LDM) metadata partition. The MSR partition varies in size based on the size of the GPT disk. For disks smaller than 16 GB, the MSR partition is 32 MB. For disks larger than 16 GB, the MSR partition is 128 MB. The MSR partition is not visible in Disk Management, and you cannot store data on the MSR partition or delete it)
network partitionNetzwerkpartition (A state in which one or more of the nodes in a cluster cannot communicate with the other cluster nodes. In this case, the cluster may be split into two or more partitions that cannot communicate with each other)
parent partitionübergeordnete Partition (The partition that manages the virtual machines)
partition boot sectorPartitionsstartsektor (A portion of a hard disk partition that contains information about the disk's file system and a short machine language program that loads the Windows operating system)
partition functionPartitionsfunktion (A function that defines how the rows of a partitioned table or index are spread across a set of partitions based on the values of certain columns, called partitioning columns)
partition schemePartitionsschema (A database object that maps the partitions of a partition function to a set of filegroups)
partition tablePartitionstabelle (On a hard disk, the data structure that stores the offset (location) and size of each primary partition on the disk. On MBR disks, the partition table is located in the master boot record. On GPT disks, the partition table is located in the GUID partition entry array)
precomputed partitionvorausberechnete Partition (A performance optimization that can be used with filtered merge publications)
primary partitionprimäre Partition (A type of partition created on basic disks that can host an operating system and functions as though it were a physically separate disk)
range partitionBereichspartition (A table partition that is defined by specific and customizable ranges of data)
remote partitionRemotepartition (A partition whose data is stored on a server running an instance of Analysis Services, other than the one used to store the metadata of the partition)
source partitionQuellpartition (An Analysis Services partition that is merged into another and is deleted automatically at the end of the merger process)
system partitionSystempartition (The partition that contains the hardware-specific files needed to load Windows (for example, Ntldr, Osloader, Boot.ini, Ntdetect.com). The system partition can be, but does not have to be, the same as the boot partition)
target partitionZielpartition (An Analysis Services partition into which another is merged, and which contains the data of both partitions after the merger)