![]() select partition 1 (your system partition).You can only restore one Master UEFI system partition.įor more information about the DiskPart command, refer to Microsoft documentation.What I finally did that worked was this on a separate occasion: Note: Establish mirror on the boot volume and retain this volume. (Optional) Format the system volume with FAT32.Establish a mirror from the boot volume to the secondary drive.(Optional, delete existing partition) Select partition 1 on disk 4, and then delete it with the override command. Select disk 4 as the secondary disk to create boot/system volume.Select disk 0 and create the primary UEFI boot/system volume.For more information about mirrored disk on UEFI volume refer to Microsoft document at this link: The following steps describe how to create mirrored disks on UEFI volume. To restore data to the UEFI partition, the master server should be UEFI partitioned.Įxample 5: Creating Mirrored system volume and boot volume. Note: You only need to retain the boot volume. (Optional) Format the system volume to FAT32.To create UEFI partition, disks must be converted to GPT type first. Select disks and convert to the GPT type.Similarly, you can create simple, stripe, or other dynamic disk types.Įxample 4: Creating UEFI system volume and boot volume Select disks and convert to a Dynamic storage type.Ĭonvert each disk except Disk 0 to dynamic disks.You do not need to run the retain command.Įxample 3: Creating a non-system/boot disk volume using the DiskPart command. Note: If you created a UEFI System partition, format it to a FAT32 file system before you can restore data. (Optional) Assign the volume to a drive letter and format it.(Optional) Mark the system partition as active.Create simple dynamic volumes for the System and Boot volume. ![]() (Optional) Convert to GPT style if needed.
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