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NO. The hardware does not have this limitation. The OS could limit you to under 2TB PER PARTITION. You could partition for example a 4Tb drive into two 2 Tb partitions with no problem, I for example have a 4Tb Nvme with a small 537Mb FAT partition (created by Linux as ir is required to boot) and the rest is a 4Tb partition using the Ext4 filesystem.
The limitations you will encounter are:
If you use MBR (Master Boot Record) you are limited to four primary partitions. To have more than four partitions, you could create 3 primary partitions and one extended partition further subdivided into logical partitions.
If you partition your drive with GPT (GUID Partition Table) you can have up to 128 primary partitions and unlimited numbers of logical partitions.
DISK CAPACITY:
MBR drives are limited to a maximum capacity of 2Terabytes
GPT drives can be up to 18 Exabytes. If you have a 3Terabyte or larger drive, you will need to format it using GPT rather than MBR. |
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