This article is an attempt to provide basic information about disk naming and partition numbering conventions, in non-technical terms, to those new to Linux. So, it’s a Linux disk partitioning guide. I believe a basic understanding of all the aspects concerning how a disk is referenced and partitioned will put you in a better position to troubleshoot installation and disk-related problems.

Basic information about partition tables and the difference between primary and logical partitions will be covered.

Hard Drive Naming Convention: – The first thing you need to know is there is no “C drive” or “D drive” in Linux. There are equivalents, but when you come across a reference to a hard drive in a modern Linux system, you will typically see something like /dev/sda, /dev/sdb, /dev/sdc, … etc. The “dev” is short for device, and in this case, a block storage device. The “sd” is short for SCSI mass-storage driver. (SCSI stands for Small Computer System Interface.) For the rest of this article, the “/dev/” will be dropped, so all references to hard drives and partitions will start with the last part only.

The first hard drive detected by a Linux system carries the sda label. In numerical terms, it is hard drive 0 (zero; counting begins from 0, not 1). The second hard drive is sdb, the third drive, sdc, and so on. In the screenshot below, there are two hard drives – sda and sdb, detected by the installer.



This screenshot comes from an installation attempt where three hard drives were attached to the system.



Partition Tables: – A partition table describes the partitions of a hard drive or any storage device. And there are two standards for the layout of the partition table – MBR (Master Boot Record) and GPT (GUID Partition Table). MBR, also know as ms-dos, is what you might call the first standard. GPT came much later. While MBR is still the most widely used partition table, it comes with two major limitations which led to the development of GPT. They are:

It does not allow the configuration of more than four main partitions. Those partitions are called primary partitions. Disk partitions may not exceed 2TB

The first limitation will be discussed in the next section. Nothing more will be written about the second in this article.

Partitions and Partition Numbering: – To install an operating system on a hard drive, it must first be subdivided into distinct storage units. Those storage units are called partitions. Under the MBR partitioning scheme, which is the default on virtually all Linux distributions, there are three different types of partitions – Primary, Extended, and Logical. Extended, and Logical partitions will be discussed further down.

With MBR, any partition that is not explicitly created as an extended or logical partition, is a primary partition. And, as stated earlier, there can be no more than four primary partitions. The screenshot below was taken from an installation process where four primary partitions were created. If you observe closely, you will see that the first primary partition is sda1 and the last sda4. Unlike hard drives, partition numbers start from 1, not 0 (zero). Any space not allocated to the primary partitions is shown as “Free.” But while it may be free, it is, however, unusable. And that is because as far as the system is concerned, that free space does not exist.



So if you attempt to create another partition using the free space, the installer will throw up the type of error message shown in this image. The error message will always say, “not enough free space,” even when you know that there is space available. And it does not matter how much that free space is. It will be unusable.



To get around the four primary partitions limit of the MBR partition table, the smart guys involved came up with the concept of an extended partition. By tagging a partition as an extended partition, it is then possible to create many more partitions under the extended partition. Those partitions are called logical partitions. Theoretically, there is no limit to the number of logical partitions that you can create. Note: Only one extended partition may be configured on a single hard drive.

What the concept of extended partition brings to the table is illustrated in the screenshot below. You can see that there are three primary partitions (sda1, sda2 and sda3). And the fourth partition is an extended partition, which makes it possible to create more partitions (sda5, sda6 and sda7 in this example). Under an extended partition, you can have free space, and that free space will still be usable. So you do not have to allocate all the available free space to the logical partitions of an extended partition.



Being able to create logical partitions comes in handy when you have to dual-boot a Linux distribution with other operating systems like Windows, PC-BSD or even another Linux distribution, especially if that other operating system has used up three primary partitions. In the image below, which was taken while setting up a system to dual-boot Windows 7 and Fedora 15 (see how to dual-boot Fedora 15 and Windows 7), three Windows 7 partitions already exist on the target hard drive. That meant there was just one primary partition to play with. Only by setting up the available free space as an extended partition was it possible to install the system. What this also shows is that Linux can boot from a logical partition.



In the last two screenshots, the extended partitions were the last primary partitions (sda4). But it does not have to be. In this screenshot, for example, the extended partition is the second primary partition (sda2), and first logical partition number is still 5 (sda5). So whether an extended partition is the last primary partition or not, the logical partition number always starts with the number 5.



Not all installation programs broadcast the presence of an extended partition. But if you know what to look for, you can tell if one exists. In the image below, for example, you can see the partition numbers go from 1, then 5, 6 and 7. The presence of partition number 5 and above, is the most obvious tell-tale sign of an extended partition. This image, by the way, was taken while installing Ubuntu.



GPT: – As stated earlier, GPT, or GUID Partition Table, overcomes two limitations of the MBR scheme – maximum of four primary partitions, and the 2TB limit to partition sizes. In the image below, for example, you can see that there are eight partitions, with about 45GB still available. The most important point to note here is that all eight partitions are primary partitions, as the concept of extended and logical partitions is foreign to GPT.



With GPT, there can always be unallocated space at the end of existing partitions. And unlike the case with an MBR scheme that has no extended partition, that “unallocated” space can be used to create new or additional partitions, unless the maximum number of partitions possible with GPT has been reached. In the image below, for example, there are six partitions and a small unallocated space remaining. The unallocated space may be used to create a new partition.



Currently, Chakra is the only Linux distribution that is configured to use GPT by default. You may read GPT disk partitioning guide for Chakra to see the steps involved. Fedora 16, which is slated for release in early November 2011, will support GPT. Test installations of the first beta release show that GPT will be the default in standalone installations. In dual-boot setups, MBR will be used if there is an existing operating system installed on MBR partitions on the target disk. You may read feature preview of Fedora 16 installer and Fedora 16 KDE and GNOME alpha screenshots for a few screenshots of GPT partitions in Anaconda, the Fedora system installer.