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Oem partition running out of space
Oem partition running out of space












oem partition running out of space oem partition running out of space

Make one large partition from all that space using the files system of NTFS. The majority of your drive will now be unallocated space in between Windows and Linux.

oem partition running out of space

Resize and move sda3 with zero space following to the minimum size it will allow (total of all logical partitions in the extended partition). Resize and move sda6 with zero space follwing at a size of 20 - 30 GiB. Now I would resize and move sda7 with and zero space following down to 10 - 30 GiB. (Next time you use windows it will run chkdsk since the partition size is different, no big deal, it will only happen once). Shrink the windows partiion down to 30 - 50 GiB ( this is why you had to pull all data off of windows). (meaning put it on and external drive, cd's, or DVD's and delete from the system hard drives) This means anything the operating systems and installed programs don't need. Pull all data off of both linux and windows. Now third option, what I would do if you want an area of shared data for both Windows and Linux. Resize sda7 to use up all unallocated space. You should now have some unallocated space between sda6 and sda7 if you didn't just use all the unallocated in the last step. Resize and move sda6 (zero space before and size at least 20 GiB but you could just use up all unallocated if you want). Move sda5 to the left (zero space before but the same size). This will now drop unallocated into the extended partition. Resize sda 3 to the left (zero space before. Turn off swap by right clicking and choosing that option. Using the same type of technique, move sda2 (keep the same size but zero free space before) to the left. Moving a partition takes some time because it will have to clone your current data and rewrite it to a different spot. Resize sda6 to use up all that unallocated space. This will create unallocated space between sda6 and sda7. Shrink it down to free up about 10 GiB with the free space following as a zero. Just right click on sda7 and choose resize/move. You can apply one step at a time or put in all steps and apply, it will run through one step at a time in the order you chose.įist is the quickest but least recommended. This is nice because you can look at the picture showing the partitions to see the result without actually doing something that could cause problems. Keep in mind, when you choose to do anything (like resize and move) it adds that step to a queue but you have to click apply for the steps to actually be executed. All steps are from the booted DVD using gparted.














Oem partition running out of space