While I'm not exactly a noob regarding partitioning I am faced with a situation that I'd like some input on.
I recently bought a Toshiba Satellite L350D and the first thing I did after booting it and checking out Vista was to pop in my Kubuntu liveCD to check for hidden partitions. There was one at the beginning of the drive ahead of Vista (of course) so I mounted it and took a look at how much data was actually there. I was surprised to find only 150M of the 1.5G partition actually being used.
Before mounting, I had thought it was just a restore partition but after finding that small amount of data I contacted Toshiba tech support and had two techs tell me "There is no hidden partition on your machine." I assured them that there was and that I had mounted it and discovered that it was largely useless. Then I browbeat them into sending me proper recovery media for free.
This brings me to my question: Can I expand my NTFS partition & file system backward and thereby roll that 1.5G mini-partition into the larger NTFS partition?
I've already successfully shrunk the Vista partition to make room for Kubuntu, but ntfsresize's wiki, man page and FAQ says nothing about whether one can expand an NTFS volume backward toward the beginning of the disk instead of the typical direction.
Eventually, I want four primary partitions: NTFS for Vista, FAT32 for the common area, ext3 and swap for Kubuntu. I hate dealing with extended logical partitions and thus, I would like to eliminate this useless partition while simultaneously reclaiming that 1.5G of space.
And yes, I know I could just scrap the NTFS partition, remake it, and re-install Vista but I won't have the recovery media for at least another week and I'd like to get this sorted before then.
Thanks for any input guys!
I recently bought a Toshiba Satellite L350D and the first thing I did after booting it and checking out Vista was to pop in my Kubuntu liveCD to check for hidden partitions. There was one at the beginning of the drive ahead of Vista (of course) so I mounted it and took a look at how much data was actually there. I was surprised to find only 150M of the 1.5G partition actually being used.
Before mounting, I had thought it was just a restore partition but after finding that small amount of data I contacted Toshiba tech support and had two techs tell me "There is no hidden partition on your machine." I assured them that there was and that I had mounted it and discovered that it was largely useless. Then I browbeat them into sending me proper recovery media for free.
This brings me to my question: Can I expand my NTFS partition & file system backward and thereby roll that 1.5G mini-partition into the larger NTFS partition?
I've already successfully shrunk the Vista partition to make room for Kubuntu, but ntfsresize's wiki, man page and FAQ says nothing about whether one can expand an NTFS volume backward toward the beginning of the disk instead of the typical direction.
Eventually, I want four primary partitions: NTFS for Vista, FAT32 for the common area, ext3 and swap for Kubuntu. I hate dealing with extended logical partitions and thus, I would like to eliminate this useless partition while simultaneously reclaiming that 1.5G of space.
And yes, I know I could just scrap the NTFS partition, remake it, and re-install Vista but I won't have the recovery media for at least another week and I'd like to get this sorted before then.
Thanks for any input guys!
Comment