Disk Partitioning SNAFU

Talk about "WhatEVER !"..
Post Reply
Message
Author
ArtShapiro
Senior Member
Senior Member
Posts: 639
Joined: Fri Oct 13, 2006 12:48 am
Location: Lake Forest, CA

Disk Partitioning SNAFU

#1 Post by ArtShapiro » Wed Mar 17, 2010 12:06 pm

Nothing whatsoever to do with Thinkpads, but there are lots of practical and smart folks out there, so:

I recently installed Win 7 on my primary desktop machine. I took a 750 gig drive, partitioned it roughly in two (350 gigs C: for Windows, the rest for D:), and have been happily running for a couple weeks without incident.

Until last night, when, to my horror, I discovered that I'd somehow dropped the proverbial zero and the C: partition wasn't 350 gigs - it is 35 gigs! And the D: partition is more than 700 gigs.

I went into the disk management console, and found that I could shrink D: with no problems. But I can't expand C: .

As both partitions are backed up to a Windows Home Server machine, as are all my Thinkpads, I suppose I could simply purge and repartition the disk and restore from the WHS machine. This is just a little scary, because if something goes wrong I'm in a heap of trouble. I'd rather do something - if possible - that leaves things resident on the disk.

Any wild ideas out there?

Art

wearetheborg
Senior Member
Senior Member
Posts: 569
Joined: Sun Oct 22, 2006 1:12 am
Location: San Pablo, California

Re: Disk Partitioning SNAFU

#2 Post by wearetheborg » Wed Mar 17, 2010 1:06 pm

If you had data on the 350GB XP partition, a lot of it has probably been lost due to win 7 overwriting it.
I will assume you dont care about that data. This is using the gparted tool.
Option one: you shrink the win 7 partition and make another partition say E: which will be accessible from XP.
Option two: you nuke win 7, delete that partition, and expand the XP partition to 350GB (can be done with gparted CD).
Option three: You actually "move" the win 7 partition to create space for XP (and then expand the XP partition). You will need to check if there are any issues involved with booting windows if this is done
HP NC8000 UXGA; Dell Precision M90 WUXGA; R50P UXGA
Please PM me if you've had experience with SquareTrade warranties

ArtShapiro
Senior Member
Senior Member
Posts: 639
Joined: Fri Oct 13, 2006 12:48 am
Location: Lake Forest, CA

Re: Disk Partitioning SNAFU

#3 Post by ArtShapiro » Wed Mar 17, 2010 2:14 pm

I have to thoroughly digest your message, but let me clarify:

XP is gone forever - another physical disk now sitting on a shelf.

C: is the Windows 7 partition, whereas D: is just a general partition for data and stuff. It really doesn't have much on it, and that stuff could easily be offloaded temporarily.

Could I do that, nuke D:, remove it as a partition, expand C: to incorporate the entire disk, and then repartition back into half C: and half D: ?

Art

Vempele
Sophomore Member
Posts: 125
Joined: Fri Oct 16, 2009 8:57 am
Location: Helsinki, Finland

Re: Disk Partitioning SNAFU

#4 Post by Vempele » Wed Mar 17, 2010 2:43 pm

Yes, though it's needlessly complicated. Why don't you just shrink D:, create a new 350GB partition and copy D's contents to it, delete D: and expand C:?
Last edited by Vempele on Wed Mar 17, 2010 3:04 pm, edited 2 times in total.

ArtShapiro
Senior Member
Senior Member
Posts: 639
Joined: Fri Oct 13, 2006 12:48 am
Location: Lake Forest, CA

Re: Disk Partitioning SNAFU

#5 Post by ArtShapiro » Wed Mar 17, 2010 3:02 pm

Vempele wrote:Yes, though it's needlessly complicated. Why don't you just shrink D:, create a new 350GB partition and copy D's contents to it, delete D: and expand C:?
Now that sounds even better...thanks to both of you. Doing it natively rather than with a third-party product is great.

Art :D

NorrisCell
Senior Member
Senior Member
Posts: 882
Joined: Mon Apr 30, 2007 3:41 pm
Location: Las Vegas, NV

Re: Disk Partitioning SNAFU

#6 Post by NorrisCell » Thu Apr 01, 2010 7:17 pm

GParted should be able to shrink one partition and expand another without issue. I've done it before when I miscalculated the space I would need for another OS. Be prepared to give it plenty of time, but it can be done without creating or destroying any existing partitions.
Cell phones are my specialty. Got questions? Ask away.

ArtShapiro
Senior Member
Senior Member
Posts: 639
Joined: Fri Oct 13, 2006 12:48 am
Location: Lake Forest, CA

Re: Disk Partitioning SNAFU

#7 Post by ArtShapiro » Thu Apr 01, 2010 10:17 pm

Didn't need GPARTED; native functionality worked fine as suggested. A handful of minutes and my disk was basically half/half C: / D: and has been running without incident.

Art

Post Reply
  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post

Return to “Off-Topic Stuff”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: axur-delmeria and 6 guests