When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Drive letter assignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drive_letter_assignment

    Starting with DOS 5.0, the system ensures that drive C: is always a hard disk, even if the system has more than two physical floppy drives. While without deliberate remapping, the drive letter assignments are typically fixed until the next reboot, however, Zenith MS-DOS 3.21 will update the drive letter assignments when resetting a drive. This ...

  3. GNOME Disks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNOME_Disks

    GNOME Disks is a graphical front-end for udisks. [3] It can be used for partition management, S.M.A.R.T. monitoring, benchmarking, and software RAID (until v. 3.12). [4] An introduction is included in the GNOME Documentation Project. Disks used to be known as GNOME Disk Utility or palimpsest Disk Utility. Udisks was named DeviceKit-disks in ...

  4. Runlevel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Runlevel

    A runlevel defines the state of the machine after boot. Different runlevels are typically assigned (not necessarily in any particular order) to the single-user mode, multi-user mode without network services started, multi-user mode with network services started, system shutdown, and system reboot system states.

  5. Non-standard RAID levels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-standard_RAID_levels

    When a disk fails, erased data is rebuilt using all the operational disks in the array, the bandwidth of which is greater than that of the fewer disks of a conventional RAID group. Furthermore, if an additional disk fault occurs during a rebuild, the number of impacted tracks requiring repair is markedly less than the previous failure and less ...

  6. Logical Volume Manager (Linux) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logical_Volume_Manager_(Linux)

    Creating single logical volumes of multiple physical volumes or entire hard disks (somewhat similar to RAID 0, but more similar to JBOD), allowing for dynamic volume resizing. Managing large hard disk farms by allowing disks to be added and replaced without downtime or service disruption, in combination with hot swapping.

  7. Disk mirroring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_mirroring

    In data storage, disk mirroring is the replication of logical disk volumes onto separate physical hard disks in real time to ensure continuous availability. It is most commonly used in RAID 1 . A mirrored volume is a complete logical representation of separate volume copies.

  8. kdump (Linux) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kdump_(Linux)

    Kdump replaced the deprecated Linux Kernel Crash Dumps (LKCD) tool, which also wrote the contents of memory upon a crash. [11] Kdump presents a more efficient, scalable utility than LKCD. [12] kdump functionality, together with kexec, was merged into the Linux kernel mainline in kernel version 2.6.13, which was released on August 29, 2005. [13]

  9. I/O scheduling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I/O_scheduling

    The position of I/O schedulers (center) within various layers of the Linux kernel's storage stack. [1] Input/output (I/O) scheduling is the method that computer operating systems use to decide in which order I/O operations will be submitted to storage volumes. I/O scheduling is sometimes called disk scheduling.