Site icon EfmSoft

What is 0xC038001A

 

Could be also:

ConstantTypeOS
STATUS_VOLMGR_EXTENT_ALREADY_USEDNTSTATUSWindows
Previous Next
ERROR_VOLMGR_DYNAMIC_DISK_NOT_SUPPORTED ERROR_VOLMGR_EXTENT_NOT_CONTIGUOUS

ERROR_VOLMGR_EXTENT_ALREADY_USED

Sometimes, an extra chunk of storage exists on a hard drive. You can use that unallocated portion of disk space to make a drive’s main volume larger.

To know whether you have unallocated space on your disk drive, you can look at the drive in the Disk Management console window.

What may not be obvious is that you can use any chunk of unallocated storage on any drive to make any other drive larger. You can even combine unused chunks from several hard drives to increase the storage capacity of a single drive. To make any or all of that happen, follow these steps:

Use Diskpart.exe to extend a data volume in Windows Server 2003, in Windows XP, and in Windows 2000

You can use the Diskpart.exe utility to manage disks, partitions, and volumes from a command-line interface. You can use Diskpart.exe on both Basic disks and Dynamic disks. If an NTFS volume resides on a hardware RAID 5 container that can add space to the container, you can extend the NTFS Volume with Diskpart.exe while the disk remains a Basic disk.

Use the extend command to incorporate unallocated space into an existing volume while preserving the data.

The following are the requirements for the extend command:

To extend a partition or volume, first select the volume to give it the focus, and then specify how large to make the extension. To extend a volume, follow these steps:

  1. At a command prompt, type diskpart.exe.

  2. Type list volume to display the existing volumes on the computer.

  3. Type Select volume <volume number> where <volume number> is number of the volume that you want to extend.

  4. Type extend [size=n] [disk=n] [noerr]. The following section describes the parameters:

    • size=n

      The space, in megabytes (MB), to add to the current partition. If you don't specify a size, the disk is extended to use all the next contiguous unallocated space.

    • disk=n

      The dynamic disk on which to extend the volume. Space equal to size=n is allocated on the disk. If no disk is specified, the volume is extended on the current disk.

    • noerr

      For scripting only. When an error is thrown, this parameter specifies that Diskpart continue to process commands as if the error didn't occur. Without the noerr parameter, an error causes Diskpart to exit with an error code.

  5. Type exit to exit Diskpart.exe.

When the extend command is complete, you should receive a message that states that Diskpart successfully extended the volume. The new space should be added to the existing drive while maintaining the data on the volume.

In Windows XP and Windows 2000, you can't use Diskpart.exe to extend a simple volume on a Dynamic disk that was originally created on a Basic disk. You can extend only simple volumes that were created after the disk was upgraded to Dynamic disk. If you try to extend a simple volume on a Dynamic disk that was originally created on a Basic disk, you receive the following error message. This restriction was removed in Windows Server 2003.

Diskpart failed to extend the volume.
Please make sure the volume is valid for extending

Note

  • Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP include Diskpart.exe as part of the base operating system.
  • We recommend that you contact your system vendor for updated BIOS, firmware, drivers, and agents before you convert to Dynamic disks.

Extend the boot partition in Windows Server 2008

To extend the boot partition in Windows Server 2008, follow these steps:

  1. Click Start > Server Manager.
  2. In the navigation pane, expand Storage, and then click Disk Management.
  3. In the details pane, right-click the volume that you want, and then click Extend Volume.
  4. Follow the instructions in the Extend Volume Wizard to extend the boot partition.

Note

You can only extend the boot partition in contiguous unallocated disk space.

Exit mobile version