From the course: Windows Server 2019: High Availability

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Remove a Clustered Shared Volume

Remove a Clustered Shared Volume - Windows Server Tutorial

From the course: Windows Server 2019: High Availability

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Remove a Clustered Shared Volume

- [Instructor] Removing a Clustered Shared Volume is easy to do, but can have some consequences if you're not aware of what's running in that Cluster Shared Volume prior to removal. If we double click on our C drive in Windows Explorer, we see our ClusterStorage and we see Volume1 and Volume2. Sometimes the pictures don't match up but that is nothing to worry about as long as you can open them and see the data. You're going to minimize and now we're going to go to our disks and we see our Cluster 2 disk, which allowed us to have that cluster storage that you see below; Volume1 and Volume2. What you're going to do is right click on that and choose Remove From Cluster Shared Volumes. Click Yes. And we see it's now offline. And now the storage has come back as just Available Storage. It's simple storage and we can see now that the clustered data is set to the F drive and we see our other Volume is not yet set a drive letter but will shortly. And if it doesn't happen automatically, you…

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