Extending NTFS volume fails but appears to be successful (329826)
The information in this article applies to:
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Server SP1
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Server SP2
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Server SP3
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server SP1
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server SP2
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server SP3
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Datacenter Server SP2
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Datacenter Server SP3
- Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition
- Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition SP1
- Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition SP1a
- Microsoft Windows XP Professional
- Microsoft Windows XP Professional SP1
- Microsoft Windows XP Professional SP1a
This article was previously published under Q329826 SYMPTOMSWhen you try to extend an NTFS file system volume on a basic
disk, or when you try to extend a dynamic NTFS volume, the operation is not
successful. In Disk Management, the partition appears to be extended and
appears to use the additional free space, showing that the volume was
successfully spanned across disks. However, the NTFS on that volume is still
the original size that it was before the extension. In My Computer, the
properties of the volume show that the volume is the same size that it was
before the extension. If you run Chkdsk on the NTFS volume, it reports the
volume size that existed before you tried to perform the
extension.
This problem may also occur if you use the unattended
parameter extendoempartition=1 during an unattended Windows setup and the boot
disk is larger than approximately 200 gigabytes (GB). Setup successfully
extends the partition but fails "silently" to increase the NTFS. After Setup
has completed, the system volume properties as shown in My Computer show that
the volume is the same size as it was before the installation.CAUSE This problem may occur when the NTFS driver runs out of
resources when it tries to extend the volume on a very large disk.
Note The size of the disk can vary. The failure depends on the amount
of physical memory that is installed on the computer at the time of the
extension or the unattended Windows installation.RESOLUTIONTo resolve this issue, see the section that applies to your
operating system to obtain the fix. Information about this fix- This fix will not correct an already extended partition
whose volume size is inaccurately reported. This hotfix is preventive in nature
and must be installed before you extend the volume. To correct the volume size
if this problem has already occurred, contact Microsoft Product Support
Services.
- To prevent this problem from occurring during an unattended
installation, the installation media or the share point where setup is
performed must contain this hotfix.
Service pack informationMicrosoft Windows XP To resolve
this problem, obtain the latest service pack for Windows XP. For additional
information, click the following article number to view the article in the
Microsoft Knowledge Base: 322389 How to obtain the latest Windows XP service pack
Microsoft Windows 2000 To
resolve this problem, obtain the latest service pack for Windows 2000. For
additional information, click the following article number to view the article
in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: 260910 How to obtain the latest Windows 2000 service pack
Hotfix informationA supported hotfix is now
available from Microsoft, but it is only intended to correct the problem that
is described in this article. Only apply it to systems that are experiencing
this specific problem. This hotfix may receive additional testing. Therefore,
if you are not severely affected by this problem, we recommend that you wait
for the next Windows 2000 service pack that contains this hotfix. To resolve this problem immediately, contact Microsoft Product Support Services to obtain the hotfix. For a complete list of Microsoft Product Support Services telephone numbers and information about support costs, visit the following Microsoft Web site: Note In special cases, charges that are ordinarily incurred for support calls may be canceled if a Microsoft Support Professional determines that a specific update will resolve your problem. The usual support costs will apply to additional support questions and issues that do not qualify for the specific update in question. The English
version of this hotfix has the file attributes (or later file attributes) that
are listed in the following table. The dates and times for these files are
listed in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). When you view the file information,
it is converted to local time. To find the difference between UTC and local
time, use the Time Zone tab in the Date and Time tool in
Control Panel.
Date Time Version Size File name
--------------------------------------------------------
27-Nov-2002 20:14 5.0.2195.6143 514,192 Ntfs.sys WORKAROUND To work around this problem during an unattended setup if
you do not have the hotfix, instead of using the extendoempartition=1 parameter
to use all the disk space, you can specify the additional amount of disk space
to use for the extension by using the following parameter, where
nn is the number of megabytes (MB) to add to the
existing partition: Note To use only a portion of the free space, the entry must contain
the number of megabytes that you want to increase the existing partition by. If
you currently have a 4 GB boot partition and you want to increase the size of
the partition by 1 GB, use the value 1024. If you set a value for which there
is not sufficient free space, the upgrade process finishes, but the expansion
of the partition does not occur. By specifying a smaller size, you
can extend the volume during a new unattended installation. STATUSMicrosoft
has confirmed that this is a problem in the Microsoft products that are listed
in the "Applies to" section of this article. This problem was
first corrected in Microsoft Windows 2000 Service Pack
4. This problem was first corrected in Microsoft
Windows XP Service Pack 2.REFERENCES For
additional information, click the following article number to view the article
in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: 289876
How to expand the boot partition during a Windows 2000 upgrade
325590 How to use Diskpart.exe to extend a data volume
Modification Type: | Minor | Last Reviewed: | 10/11/2005 |
---|
Keywords: | kbHotfixServer kbQFE kbOSWin2000fix kbWin2kSP4fix kbWin2000preSP4Fix kbbug kbfix KB329826 |
---|
|