Is my unallocated space the "hidden" partition?
Is my unallocated space the "hidden" partition?
Having searched the forum I remain confused about this infamous hidden partition.
I have not yet used/installed Rapid Restore on my T40 but I still assume I have that hidden partition (long since "unhidden" in bios) on my hard drive. Partition Magic, however, says the space (about 3GB) is unallocated and empty. Is there really nothing there and can that unallocated disk space be redistributed? Or is it actually allocated to something unknown to PMagic?
I assumed it was related to Rapid Restore but since that is not yet installed I guess the space might be for more general system recovery.
I already have the recovery CDs so can I simply delete/distribute that 3GB of allegedly empty hard disk space? Are there any other factors I need to know about?
Thanks.
I have not yet used/installed Rapid Restore on my T40 but I still assume I have that hidden partition (long since "unhidden" in bios) on my hard drive. Partition Magic, however, says the space (about 3GB) is unallocated and empty. Is there really nothing there and can that unallocated disk space be redistributed? Or is it actually allocated to something unknown to PMagic?
I assumed it was related to Rapid Restore but since that is not yet installed I guess the space might be for more general system recovery.
I already have the recovery CDs so can I simply delete/distribute that 3GB of allegedly empty hard disk space? Are there any other factors I need to know about?
Thanks.
I believe it is a proprietary format, meaning it's not Fat32 or NTFS. I actually managed to unhide mine and I reformatted it.
Now I'm doing a fresh install of WinXP and will just repartition the entire drive into one large one.
Now I'm doing a fresh install of WinXP and will just repartition the entire drive into one large one.
T40 2373-72U | 1.5GHz P M| 14.1" XGA | 32MB Radeon 7500 | 768MB | 40GB 5400rpm | CD-RW/DVD | WiFi B | XP Pro SP2
Just have PM create a partition in the unallocated space, and then have it merge it with your C: partition. You un-hid it but never to PM to do anything with it.
Of course, having a current complete (and known good) backup would be a really good idea before doing any partition work. To be extra safe run PM from the CD or recovery disks rather than from Windows.
Ed Gibbs
Of course, having a current complete (and known good) backup would be a really good idea before doing any partition work. To be extra safe run PM from the CD or recovery disks rather than from Windows.
Ed Gibbs
Actually the space does contain software for rebuilding your OS partition. If you have a set of Recovery CDs you don't need this partition. If you don't have a set of Recovery CDs you should either create a set first, or at least copy/burn the C:\DRIVERS and C:\IBMTOOLS directories to CD. You may also want to copy C:\I386 since this may be used to create a bootable installation CD (Search the forums for more details - there are several links and references to this).
The majority of C:\IBMTOOLS (and C:\DRIVERS) may be found at http://www.tpdrivers.com, though some software such as WinDVD may only be found in C:\IBMTOOLS and is not downloadable via the web.
The hidden partition is shipped from the factory already populated to be able to rebuild your TP. IBM Rescue and Recovery modifies this partition (if existing) but is not the only software that makes use of it.
Both PARTIES and HPA types (older and newer) are standards used by several manufacturers. Your hidden partition may be either, but is most likely HPA. This doesn't concern you except for the fact that they are both intended to appear as unallocated/unused since they are designed to be hidden by the BIOS and inaccessible via typical methods. You generally only unhide the hidden partition area when you want to recover the space. PM is correct in its reporting since that is what it is supposed to show. There is in fact data in this area, though.
IBM uses PowerQuest tools for managing partitions and in its recovery partition and CDs, BTW.
The majority of C:\IBMTOOLS (and C:\DRIVERS) may be found at http://www.tpdrivers.com, though some software such as WinDVD may only be found in C:\IBMTOOLS and is not downloadable via the web.
The hidden partition is shipped from the factory already populated to be able to rebuild your TP. IBM Rescue and Recovery modifies this partition (if existing) but is not the only software that makes use of it.
Both PARTIES and HPA types (older and newer) are standards used by several manufacturers. Your hidden partition may be either, but is most likely HPA. This doesn't concern you except for the fact that they are both intended to appear as unallocated/unused since they are designed to be hidden by the BIOS and inaccessible via typical methods. You generally only unhide the hidden partition area when you want to recover the space. PM is correct in its reporting since that is what it is supposed to show. There is in fact data in this area, though.
IBM uses PowerQuest tools for managing partitions and in its recovery partition and CDs, BTW.
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