Operating System Fundamentals 71 A hard disk can only have four primary partitions, each of which could be used fora different file system and/or operating system. A partition that contains an operating system is called an
active partition. However, once an operating system is installed, you can select a partition and further divide it into
logical drives (each of which would be assigned a drive letter. Although the data on logical drives is not physically isolated (as
it is in partitions, each logical drive appears as if it were a separate disk for file management purposes. This could be useful for organizing file storage, or for allocating logical drive space for the exclusive use of different computer users.
How is Data Structured on a Magnetic Disk Data on magnetic disks
is physically organized using tracks,
sectors and
clusters. On hard disks, data is also organized using
platters (a floppy
disk has only one platter, while a hard disk can have several physical platters, which are each organized into tracks, sectors and clusters. A
track is a concentric circle on a disk or platter. A
sector is a division in a concentric circle. A
cluster is the smallest unit of storage space available on a disk.
The larger a hard disk is, the bigger the clusters become. On a floppy disk, the cluster size is the same as the size of a sector
(512 bytes. Figure 5.5 (below) shows the organization of tracks and sectors on a floppy disk.
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