computer operating systems, such as Windows, allocate space on the hard
drive as adjacent groups of sectors, known as allocation units, or
clusters. When you create a new file, the operating system finds
available space and allocates that space to the file. Unallocated space
is space that is not allocated to active files within a file system.
The type of object that you can create in unallocated space depends on
whether your hard disk is a basic disk, containing primary partitions,
extended partitions and logical drives, or a dynamic disk, containing
volumes that span multiple disks. In the case of a basic hard disk, you
can use unallocated space outside an existing partition, or logical
storage unit, to create a primary partition -- typically, the partition
used to start the operating system -- or an extended partition.
Similarly, you can use unallocated space inside an existing partition to
create logical drives, or parts of the same physical disk that are
managed as independent units.
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