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[XP] Veranderen van de boot (of system) partitie driveletter

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  • 225 views sinds 30-01-2008
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Hoe verander je de drive letter van de system (of boot) partitie.

Het verhaal:

Ik heb een nieuwe HD (200GB) gekocht. En ik had er al 1 van 120 GB.
Die van de 120GB is verdeeld in 3 partities van 40 GB en die van 200 in 2 x 100GB.

Ik heb op de 1e partitie van de eerste hardeschijf WinXP prof geinstalleerd.
En ook nog een keer windows xp prof op de 1e partitie van de 2de HD.

De eerste HD gaat dan door mijn vader (Frans) in gebruik worden genomen.
En die 2de HD door mezelf (Jasper). (Dit omdat ik knettergek wordt van mijn vaders wijzgiungen continu (ondanks de 2 verschillende profielen).

Ik wil nu dat het volgt gaat uitzien:

C: (Frans BOOT)
D: (Frans DATA)
E: (Frans VIDEO)
F: (Jasper BOOT)
G: (Jasper DATA)

Waarbij "Frans BOOT" de boot partitie van HD1 (dus system partitie)
en "Jasper BOOT" de boot partitie van HD2.

Als ik in het bootmenu kies voor de XP installatie op HD1 dan krijg ik ook deze volgorde. Maar als ik kies voor WINXP van HD2 Dan krijg ik de volgende volgorde:

C: (Frans BOOT)
D: (Jasper BOOT)
E: (Frans VIDEO)
F: (Frans DATA)
G: (Jasper DATA)

En dan kan ik de letter D meer wijzigen, omdat deze de boot partitie is.

Ik had een documente van de KB van MicroSoft gelezen dat jij vie het register naar SYSTEM en dan Mounted devices kon gaan en dan \dospartitions\d: veranderen in een andere naam, maar toen ik dat had gedaan bleef de WInXP (HD2) bij het booten ongeveer hangen bij het aanmeldingsscherm.

Hoe kan ik nou voor zorgen dat ik zowel op de WinXP van HD1 als de WinXP van HD2 dezelfde volgorde krijg van partities en driveletters, en wel deze volgorde:
C: (Frans BOOT)
D: (Frans DATA)
E: (Frans VIDEO)
F: (Jasper BOOT)
G: (Jasper DATA)


Alvast bedankt voor de moeite

gr Jasper

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Vanuit de windows2003 help functie:
To assign, change, or remove a drive letter
Using the Windows interface

Open Computer Management (Local).
In the console tree, click Disk Management.
Where?

Computer Management (Local)
Storage
Disk Management

Right-click a partition, logical drive, or volume, and then click Change Drive Letter and Paths.
Do one of the following:
To assign a drive letter, click Add, click the drive letter you want to use, and then click OK.
To modify a drive letter, click it, click Change, click the drive letter you want to use, and then click OK.
To remove a drive letter, click it, and then click Remove.
Important

Be careful when making drive-letter assignments because many MS-DOS and Windows programs make references to a specific drive letter. For example, the path environment variable shows specific drive letters in conjunction with program names.
Notes

To perform this procedure on a local computer, you must be a member of the Backup Operators group or Administrators group on the local computer, or you must have been delegated the appropriate authority. To perform this procedure remotely, you must be a member of the Backup Operators group or Administrators group on the remote computer. If the computer is joined to a domain, members of the Domain Admins group might be able to perform this procedure. As a security best practice, consider using Run as to perform this procedure.
To open Computer Management, click Start, point to Settings, click Control Panel, double-click Administrative Tools, and then double-click Computer Management.
A computer can use up to 26 drive letters. Drive letters A and B are typically reserved for a floppy disk drives. If the computer does not have a floppy disk drive, you can assign drive letters A and B to removable drives, hard disk drives, or mapped network drives. Hard disk drives are typically assigned drive letters C through Z, while mapped network drives are assigned drive letters in reverse order (Z through C).
You cannot change the drive letter of the system volume or boot volume.
An error message may appear when you attempt to assign a letter to a volume, CD-ROM drive, or other removable media device, possibly because it is in use by a program in the system. If this happens, close the program accessing the volume or drive, and then click the Change Drive Letter and Paths command again.
You can also mount a local drive at an empty folder on an NTFS volume using a drive path instead of a drive letter. For more information, see Related Topics.
Using a command line

Open Command Prompt.
Type:
diskpart

At the DISKPART prompt, type:
list volume

Make note of the number of the simple volume whose drive letter you want to assign, change, or remove.

At the DISKPART prompt, type:
select volume n

Select the volume, where n is the volume's number, whose drive letter you want to assign, change, or remove.

At the DISKPART prompt, type one of the following:
assign letter=L
Where L is the drive letter you want to assign or change.

remove letter=L
Where L is the drive letter you want to remove.

Value Description
list volume Displays a list of basic and dynamic volumes on all disks.
select volume Selects the specified volume, where n is the volume number, and gives it focus. If no volume is specified, the select command lists the current volume with focus. You can specify the volume by number, drive letter, or mount point path. On a basic disk, selecting a volume also gives the corresponding partition focus.
assign letter=L Assigns a drive letter, L, to the volume with focus. If no drive letter is specified, then the next available drive letter is assigned. If the drive letter is already in use, an error is generated.
remove letter=L Removes the drive letter, L, from the volume with focus. If no drive letter or mount point is specified, then DiskPart removes the first drive letter or mount point it encounters.
The remove command can be used to change the drive letter associated with a removable drive. You cannot remove the drive letters on system, boot, or paging volumes. In addition, you cannot remove the drive letter for an OEM partition, any GPT partition with an unrecognized GUID, or any of the special, non-data, GPT partitions such as the EFI system partition.


Notes

To perform this procedure on a local computer, you must be a member of the Backup Operators group, Administrators group, or you must have been delegated the appropriate authority on the local computer. If the computer is joined to a domain, members of the Domain Admins group might be able to perform this procedure. As a security best practice, consider using Run as to perform this procedure.
To open a command prompt, click Start, point to Programs, point to Accessories, and then click Command Prompt.
A computer can use up to 26 drive letters. Drive letters A and B are typically reserved for a floppy disk drives. If the computer does not have a floppy disk drive, you can assign drive letters A and B to removable drives, hard disk drives, or mapped network drives. Hard disk drives are typically assigned drive letters C through Z, while mapped network drives are assigned drive letters in reverse order (Z through C).
You cannot change the drive letter of the system volume or boot volume.
An error message may appear when you attempt to assign a letter to a volume, CD-ROM drive, or other removable media device, possibly because it is in use by a program in the system. If this happens, close the program accessing the volume or drive, and then click the Change Drive Letter and Paths command again.
You can also mount a local drive at an empty folder on an NTFS volume using a drive path instead of a drive letter. For more information, see Related Topics.
For more information about DiskPart, see Related Topics.
Met de nadruk op 'You cannot change the drive letter of the system volume or boot volume.'