Moving Dynamic Disks
One of the advantages of dynamic disks over basic disks is that you can easily move them from one computer to another. For example, if after setting up a server, you decide that you don't really need its two additional hard disk drives, you could move them to another server where they could be better used. Before you move disks, you should access Disk Management on the server where the dynamic disks are currently installed and check their status. The status should be Healthy. If it isn't, you should fix any problems before moving the disks.
Moving System Disks Requires Additional Planning
Before you move a system disk from one computer to another, you must ensure that the computers have identically configured hard disk subsystems. If they don't, the Plug and Play ID on the system disk from the original computer won't match what the new computer is expecting. As a result, the new computer won't be able to load the right drivers and boot will fail.
You cannot move drives with BitLocker Drive Encryption using this technique. Bit- Locker Driver Encryption wraps drives in a protected seal so that any offl ine tampering is detected and results in the disk being unavailable until an administrator unlocks it. Before you can move a BitLocker encrypted drive, you must remove BitLocker Drive Encryption.
Next check to see whether any dynamic disks that you want to move are part of a spanned, extended, mirrored, striped, or RAID-5 set. If they are, you should make a note of which disks are part of which set and plan on moving all disks in a set together. If you are moving only part of a disk set, you should be aware of the consequences. For spanned, extended, or striped volumes, moving only part of the set will make the related volumes unusable on the current computer and on the computer to which you are planning to move the disks. If you plan to move only one disk of a mirrored volume, you should break the mirror before you move it. This ensures that you can keep using the disks on both computers. For RAID-5 volumes, you should move all of the disks in the set if possible. If you move only part of the RAID-5 set, you might find that you can't use the set on either computer.
To move the disks, start Computer Management and then in the left pane, select Device Manager. In the device list, expand Disk Drives. This shows a list of all the physical disk drives on the computer. Right-click each disk that you want to move, and then select Uninstall. If you are unsure which disks to uninstall, right-click each disk and select Properties. In the Properties dialog box, select the Volumes tab, and then choose Populate. This shows you the volumes on the selected disk. In Computer Management, select Disk Management. Right-click each disk that you want to move, and then select Remove Disk.
After you perform these procedures, you can move the dynamic disks. If the disks are hot swappable and this feature is supported on both computers, remove the disks from the original computer and then install them on the destination computer. Otherwise, turn off both computers, remove the drives from the original computer, and then install them on the destination computer. When you're finished, restart the computers. On the destination computer, access Disk Management, and then select Rescan Disks from the Action menu. When Disk Management finishes scanning the disks, right-click any disk marked Foreign, and click Import. You should now be able to access the disks and their volumes on the destination computer.
Note: When you move dynamic disks, the volumes on those disks should retain the drive letters they had on the previous computer. If a drive letter is already used on the destination computer, a volume receives the next available drive letter. If a dynamic volume previously did not have a drive letter, it does not receive a drive letter when moved to another computer. Additionally, if automounting is disabled, the volumes aren't automatically mounted and you must manually mount volumes and assign drive letters.
In this tutorial:
- Storage Management
- Essential Storage Technologies
- Improving Storage Management
- Booting from SANs and Using SANs with Clusters
- Configuring Multipath I/O
- Installing and Configuring File Services
- Configuring the File Services Role
- Configuring Storage
- Adding New Disks
- Using the MBR and GPT Partition Styles
- Using and Converting MBR and GPT Disks
- Using the Disk Storage Types
- Using and Converting Basic and Dynamic Disks
- Converting FAT or FAT32 to NTFS
- Working with Removable Disks
- Managing MBR Disk Partitions on Basic Disks
- Formatting a Partition, Logical Drive, or Volume
- Configuring Drive Letters
- Configuring Mount Points
- Extending Partitions
- Shrinking Partitions
- Managing GPT Disk Partitions on Basic Disks
- Primary Partitions
- Managing Volumes on Dynamic Disks
- Configuring RAID 0: Striping
- Moving Dynamic Disks
- Configuring RAID 1: Disk Mirroring
- Mirroring Boot and System Volumes
- Configuring RAID 5: Disk Striping with Parity
- Breaking or Removing a Mirrored Set
- Repairing a Mirrored System Volume
- Resolving Problems with RAID-5 Sets