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MCSE :

Dynamic disks

A physical disk that is managed by Disk Management. Dynamic disks can contain only dynamic volumes (that is, volumes created with Disk Management). Dynamic disks cannot contain partitions or logical drives, nor can they be accessed by MS-DOS. Dynamic disks are not supported on portable computers.

Fault tolerance

Iis the ability of a system to continue functioning when part of the system fails. Normally, fault tolerance is used in describing disk subsystems, but it can also apply to other parts of the system or the entire system. Fully fault-tolerant systems use redundant disk controllers and power supplies as well as fault-tolerant disk subsystems. You can also use an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) to safeguard against local power failure.

Although the data is always available in a fault-tolerant system, you still need to make backups that are stored offsite to protect the data against disasters such as a fire.

Monitor, configure, and troubleshoot volumes.

Basic volumes

Include partitions and logical drives, as well as volumes created using Windows NT 4.0, such as volume sets, stripe sets, mirror sets, and stripe sets with parity. In Windows 2000, these volumes have been renamed to spanned volumes, striped volumes, mirrored volumes, and RAID-5 volumes.

To format a basic volume, Right-click the partition, logical drive, or basic volume you want to format (or reformat), and then click Format. (You cannot format the system or boot partition)