Particularities of Operating Systems
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B.2.3 System
Folders
Main Windows parts reside in the following folders:
•
System (its name can be assigned during installation, default name is «Windows»)
•
Applications (in English and most Eastern Windows versions, its name is «Program
Files», in other Western Windows versions, this folder has other names)
•
Backup (available in Windows Me and is called «Restore»)
Acronis Disk Director Suite now supports multiple operating systems with folders with
same names on the same partition. These folders are called system folders. A system
folder is transferred to its proper location (to the root folder) only when this operating
system is booted; other times it resides in the OS Selector system folder.
The above-mentioned folders are added to the system folders list automatically when an
operating system is detected. You can always manually edit this list by running Setup
from Boot Menu and editing the properties of the selected operating system. For example,
sometimes it is useful to add the «Recycle» folder.
B.3 Windows
NT/2000/XP
B.3.1 Supported
Versions
Acronis Disk Director Suite supports Windows NT versions 3.51, 4.0, Windows 2000 and
Windows XP; it can detect the most common language versions.
B.3.2 Booting
Peculiarities
Operating systems based on Windows NT consist of two main parts: the boot part and
the main part. These parts can reside on different partitions. The boot part consists of the
operating system kernel loader NTLDR (which is also a simple boot manager), its
configuration file (BOOT.INI) and initial hardware detection code (NTDETECT.COM). The
partition where the boot part resides is called Windows NT/2000 boot partition.
The loader usually opens a simple menu from which you can choose Windows NT/2000
configuration or some other operating system whose boot sector is stored in a file.
Main Windows NT/2000 parts reside in the WINNT system folder (this can be assigned
during installation) and in the application folder (Program Files usually), whose name
cannot be changed. A partition where the main part of the operating system resides is
called the system folder partition. Multiple operating systems of Windows 95/98/Me and
Windows NT/2000 may conflict because of the application folder (see B.2.3 «System
Folders»).
It is possible for several different Windows NT/2000/XP to be booted from a single loader.
B.3.3
System and Configuration Files
Windows NT/2000/XP system files list: