Disk Management Bug with Ext3 Partitions

publius

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I've just ran into what appears to be a bug with Disk Management under Win7. THe problem seems to go back all the way to OS reporting themselves as NT 5.2 or greater. XP x64 has the problem, Win2K3 server does and Windows 7 does. I don't have any version of Vista to check, so I don't know for sure but I'd bet its there as well. THe 32-bit version of XP which reports itself as NT 5.1 doesn't have the problem.

At any rate, the problem is Disk Management seems to count all Linux partitions as primary, even those which are logical volumes inside extended partitions on MBR drives. As such, if this erroneous count exceeds 4, it will refuse to create any more primary partitions, even though there are less than 4 actual partitions in the MBR table.

I would appreciate it if any of you here who dual boot with Linux could confirm this behavior. I've reported it on some of the MS forums, but no one seems to be interested.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Pro x64
Seeing as Microsoft does not support Linux...nope not a bug.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Alienware Aurora ALX R4
OS
Windows 10 Pro (x64)
CPU
Intel Core i7-3930K (3.2GHz - 4.5GHz)
Motherboard
Alienware Aurora-R4 x79
Memory
4x Samsung 4GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (16GB 1600MHz)
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Nvidia Geforce GTX 690
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SteelSeries Siberia Elite
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell UltraSharp U3011
Screen Resolution
2560x1600
Hard Drives
Samsung 850 Pro 256 GB, Seagate 1TB Desktop Hybrid HDD, 2x Western Digital 4TB Green HDD
PSU
875W Some Dell PSU <.<
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Alienware Aurora ALX
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Custom Liquid Cooling (EK CPU & GPU blocks) dual EK 480RAD
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Logitech G710+ Mechanical
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Logitech G700s
Internet Speed
Verizon Fios (50 mbps average)
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Server: Intel NUC D54250WYK: i5-4250U, 16GB, 256 GB mSATA, Windows Server 2012 R2
As logicearth said, Microsoft doesn't support Linux. In fact, I think that the only formats that the disk manager will recognize are NTFS and FAT. That means that if you are dual-booting with either Linux (Ext4) or Mac OS X (HFS+), you're out of luck.

You can, however, use a partition manager called Partition Wizard. I haven't yet found a format that it doesn't recognize, and it works great.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo ThinkPad W520 (4270CT)
OS
Windows 7 Professional x64
CPU
Intel Core i7-2720QM
Memory
4GB (2 x 2GB)
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA Quadro 2000M (with Optimus)
Hard Drives
500 GB @ 7200 RPM
Actually, I would consider it a bug, because it prevents proper functionality of Windows itself, where you can't create any more primary partitions because of the erroneous primary partition count. It's not a matter of supporting or even recognizing Ext3/4 partitions, just properly assessing the disk layout to allow one to create and manage Window's own partitions.

Again, XP 32-bit doesn't suffer from the problem, it's only the later versions where this bug was introduced.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Pro x64
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