Order in Which MS-DOS and Windows Assign Drive Letters (51978)
The information in this article applies to:
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 3.1
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 3.2
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 3.21
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 3.3
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 3.3a
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 4.0
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 4.01
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 5.0
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 5.0a
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 6.0
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 6.2
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 6.21
- Microsoft MS-DOS operating system 6.22
- Microsoft Windows 95
- Microsoft Windows 98
- Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition
This article was previously published under Q51978 SUMMARY
Microsoft MS-DOS assigns drive letters to the first two physical
floppy disk drives and hard disk drives it finds at boot time in a
fixed sequence, including multiple partitions and logical drives on
the hard disks. You cannot change this sequence.
The drive letters assigned to additional drives installed using
DRIVER.SYS and other installable device drivers is dependent upon the
order in which the drivers are loaded in the CONFIG.SYS file. These
drive letter assignments can be influenced by changing the order of
the CONFIG.SYS statements or loading "dummy" drives to "use up" drive
letters.
Drive letter assignments can change when you upgrade from one Microsoft
MS-DOS version to another or from an original equipment manufacturer (OEM)
version of MS-DOS to another version that assigns drive letters
differently. (The order in which drive letters are assigned was modified by
OEMs in earlier versions of MS-DOS.) This article describes how MS-DOS
assigns drive letters; it does not explain how particular OEM MS-DOS
versions assign drive letters.
Modification Type: | Minor | Last Reviewed: | 12/20/2004 |
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Keywords: | KB51978 |
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