Spanned volume

A spanned volume is a formatted partition in which data is stored on more than one hard disk drive or solid-state drive, yet appears as a single volume.

A spanned volume is a non-RAID drive architecture, and may be implemented in hardware or software; It may be referred to as Concatenation, SPAN, BIG, or JBOD, though JBOD is ambiguous because it may also refer to each physical disk being presented as a separate logical volume.

Unlike RAID, spanned volumes have no fault tolerance, so if any disk fails, the data on the whole volume could be lost.

In Windows NT, a spanned volume is called a volume set. FAT16/32 and NTFS file systems may be used, and the volume can span up to 32 hard disks, and the system or boot partitions cannot be included in a spanned volume.

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