Re: How to align the hard disk
- From: "Rayees" <rayees@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 14:49:47 +0530
Hi Paul
The information is really great.
I understood upto certain extent, I downloaded PartinNT and say the disk
geometry.
I have query here. I have 60GB HDD and I have two partition. C: is Primary
and D:\ is extended partition.
When I run Winmsd --> Storage --> Disk. I saw Partition starting Offset
information for Disk 0 partition 0 is 32256 bytes where as Disk 0 partion 1
is 27,085,847,040 bytes.
If my objective is to change the partition starting offset from 32256 to
32768 (as per SAP), and I have constraints in doing that, on what basis Disk
0 Partition 1 value is so high.
I'm not ver clear, since I lack basic knowledge in this subject. Will be
greatful, if you can guide me please.
Regards
Rayees
"Paul" <nospam@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:ff59pq$ger$1@xxxxxxxxxxx
Rayees wrote:
Hi
I have a IO performance problem while I'm using SAP frontend at my
Windows XP PC.
While contacting SAP, they said that this was due to misaligned disk.
They said. Go to "Windows System Information" (command line: winmsd).
Open
"Components" / "Storage" / "Disks". You will find a "Partition starting
offset" or "Starting offset" in the list. The value has to be 64 * 512
(32,768), the default is unfortunately 63 * 512 (32,256)."
My question is how to change Partition starting offset value to 32768
instead of 32256.
Regards
Rayees
This is the manual, for a tool previously known as PowerQuest
PartitionMagic.
Symantec now owns it.
ftp://ftp.symantec.com/public/english_us_canada/products/norton_partitionmagic/npmagic_8/manuals/norton_partitionmagic_8.pdf
Note some of the comments here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Cylinder-head-sector
"The History section here is obviously a bit out of date, since CHS
tuples
haven't actually corresponded to disk hardware in a very long time!"
I doubt very much, that you can establish a relationship between physical
cylinders on a disk, and the logical addressing used to access them.
From this page, you can download PartInNT.zip . That program displays
disk geometry. The "NT" version would be good for WinXP/Win2K.
http://service1.symantec.com/Support/powerquest.nsf/pfdocs/2004073190203662
(
ftp://ftp.symantec.com/public/english_us_canada/tools/pq/utilities/PartInNT.zip )
If you unzip the file, and execute the program, it will display the
partitioning
info for the disk. The "sectors per track" is defined as 63 (as part of
being a
"large drive placeholder" for escaping the arithmetic bounds of CHS
geometry). If
the declaration is 63 sectors per track, then the first track contains
sectors
0 through 62, and the next cylinder will begin at 63. It is possible, even
when
using PartitionMagic, that it will not allow you to start the partition
offset
from the cylinder boundary. So, I guess my issue with the information
you've
been given is "64 * 512" is actually "63 * 512" as far as the large drive
placeholder values of geometry are concerned. The physical disk does not
have
63 actual sectors per track, but some other value. And that value, may not
even be stated in the available information for the hard drive.
To prove the point, if I use PartInNT to look at the "total sectors" in my
C:
partition on my 80GB drive, the sector count is 156280257. That number is
evenly divisible by 63, not 64. 63 * 2480639 = 156280257, so there are
2480639 tracks in my C partition, exactly. Thus the starting sector number
of 63, is not an error, and not something to fool with. In my opinion.
I think the information you've been given, might have been valid
20 years ago, but not now. But I'm not an expert. You should visit
comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage and ask someone there to review
the advice you've been given and give comments. I think SAP is putting
you to a lot of trouble for nothing.
Paul
.
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