New
#1
Partition
For fresh install of windows 10, how many and what are the partition
needed ? My current partition at disk 0 [C:] only have system reserved
and primary partition and primary partition for disk 1 [D:].
For fresh install of windows 10, how many and what are the partition
needed ? My current partition at disk 0 [C:] only have system reserved
and primary partition and primary partition for disk 1 [D:].
Best practice is to let Windows decide and create what partitions it needs based on your hardware and the OS you're installing. During the first phase of the install, after you have booted from the Install Media, delete ALL partitions until al that is left is one big unallocated area. In your case, do not delete D:, of course. Choose that (the big unallocated) for the install, and let Windows do the work.
Clean Install Windows 10
When doing the clean install, select the custom install option. The next screen will show a list of disks and partitions. Delete all the partitions on disk 0 until it is nothing but unallocated space. Highlight the unallocated space and click next to let Windows setup the drive the way that it wants to. Just be careful to not delete you data partition on disk 1!
If you clean install another option that is timely is BIOS/MBR versus UEFI/GPT
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/win...ive-partitions
Convert MBR Disk to GPT Disk in Windows 10
Some basics of MBR v/s GPT and BIOS v/s UEFI - Manjaro Linux
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/win...artition-style
This is key. FWIW I just installed W10 on a new SSD (using MBR) expecting it would create 4 partitions as shown in one those links but it ended up having no partitions (I intended to use the entire drive rather than separate partitions) BUT w/o the 4 partition scheme - as I "think" would be created using GPT &/or UEFI(??) - my understanding is you lose the benefits of recovery options & less chance of things getting corrupted.
You have 1 partition on the new SSD, C: drive which contains the OS. The system partition the computer boots from is on the 60 GB SSD. Your computer boots from the 60 GB SSD and then loads the OS from the new about 480 GB SSD. Newer installations of Windows 10 do not create a separate recovery partition (at least on MBR drives). The recovery function is contained in a recovery folder on C: drive. You can see where your recovery functions are loaded from, and if enabled or not, by running:
reagentc /info
Code:Microsoft Windows [Version 10.0.17763.475] (c) 2018 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. C:\Windows\system32>reagentc /info Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE) and system reset configuration Information: Windows RE status: Enabled Windows RE location: \\?\GLOBALROOT\device\harddisk3\partition4\Recovery\WindowsRE Boot Configuration Data (BCD) identifier: 6d3bfa14-6236-11e9-909b-049226daf59f Recovery image location: Recovery image index: 0 Custom image location: Custom image index: 0 REAGENTC.EXE: Operation Successful.
When performing windows upgrades windows can install on multiple drives.
Once Windows is on only one drive you can detach cables or remove drives.