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Drive mapping

 

A letter or name assigned to a disk or tape drive. In a PC, the basic drive mappings are A: for the floppy disk (B: used to be the second floppy) and C: for the primary hard disk. When new peripherals are added to the system, additional drive mappings are assigned by the operating system based on the next available letter (D:, E:, etc.).

Network Drives

In a network, drive mappings reference remote drives, and you have the option of assigning the letter of your choice. For example, on your local machine, you might map S: to refer to drive C: on a server. Each time S: is referenced on the local machine, the drive on the server is substituted behind the scenes. The mapping may also be set up to refer only to a specific folder on the remote machine, not the entire drive.

Universal Naming Convention

In the days of Windows 3.1, drive mapping was the only way to reference a remote drive. Starting with Windows 95, both drive mapping and the universal naming convention (UNC) can be used. With UNC, a computer name and drive name replace the letter-colon designation. See dynamic drive mapping, redirector and UNC.

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Wikipedia: Drive mapping
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Drive mapping is the way by which Microsoft Windows and OS/2 associate a local drive letter (A through Z) with a shared storage area to another computer over a network. After a drive has been mapped, a software application on a client's computer can read and write files from the shared storage area by accessing that drive, just as if that drive represented a local physical hard disk drive.

Contents

Alternative viewpoint #1

In Microsoft Windows and OS/2, a mapped drive is typically the place on a networked computer's hard drive that has been created/designated and given a special name. The drive, which is created by an administrator, is given certain permissions of use set by the administrator, and will store information for particular users or groups. The drive can contain any data that is compatible with the existing system.

Alternative viewpoint #2

Mapped drives are hard drives, partitions or volumes, or network drives, which are always represented by names, letter(s), or number(s) and they are often followed by additional strings of data, directory tree branches, or alternate level(s) separated by a "\" symbol. Drive mapping is used to locate directories, files or objects, and applications, and is needed by the system, administrators, various other operators, and users or groups.

Mapped drives are usually assigned a letter of the alphabet usually after the first few taken, such as A:\, B:\, C:\, and D:\ (which is usually a CD-ROM drive unit). Then, with the drive and/or directory (letters, symbols, numbers, names, and all other components) to be mapped would be entered into the necessary location(s) and displayed as the following:

Example 1:

C:\level\next level\following level

or

C:\BDB60471CL\Shared Documents\Multi-Media Dept

The preceding location may reach something like, a company's multi-media department's database, which logically is represented with the entire string "C:\BDB60471CL\Shared Documents\Multi-Media Dept." It is best to avoid confusing the physical devices in your system with your virtual or emulated devices, and your mapped drives, and doing this by reserving those areas of the hard drive and simply avoiding certain areas of the disk.

Mapping a drive can be complicated for a complex system. Network mapped drives (on LANs or WANs) are available only when the host computer is also available (i.e. online) This is a requirement for use of drives on a host. All data on various mapped drives will have certain permissions set (most newer systems) and the user will need the particular security authorizations to access it.

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