"Jeff Goldner [MS]" <jeffgo@iworkatmicrosoft> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> There are two issues:
> 1) the SCSI SBC command set - which is used regardless of interconnect
on
> Windows - only defined 32-bit block numbers. All versions of Windows (to
the
> present) only use 32-bit block numbers. With a 512 byte block, that gives
> you 2TB. This is independent of dynamic or basic disks. You can combine
> dynamic disks to arrive at a larger VOLUME: up to 32 dynamic disks can be
> combined giving you 64TB (striping) or 62TB (stripe with parity - aka
> RAID5). NTFS could support up to 256TB but not using the inbox volume
> manager.
>
> 2) the MBR partition format also restricts you to 32-bit block numbers,
so
> in order to exceed 2TB single LUNs on Windows, you would need to use GPT
> instead.
>
> The newly approved SBC-2 specification contains commands that use 64-bit
> block numbers. Expect a public announcement about support for this in the
> near future.
>
Haven't got a clue what you're on about, and don't care either. I was just
trying to help OP with something I found at the MS website. If you are as
well, please reply to OP instead.
--
Joep
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