Another Ubuntu question.

Apr 21, 2013 15:00

I first made this laptop dual boot to Ubuntu about a year or two ago, I forget how long ago. But the first time I did it, I didn't give it enough memory, and had to get advice on how to expand the memory Ubuntu got. Well, I'm finding the 10 gigs I gave it a little restrictive now, and I have no clue what happened to the original instructions on how ( Read more... )

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lightning_rose April 21 2013, 23:19:28 UTC

I have successfully used GPartEd to resize hard drive partitions several times.

http://gparted.sourceforge.net/download.php

You should burn the iso image to a CD-ROM or install it on a bootable flash drive and boot from that.

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fayanora April 21 2013, 23:51:18 UTC
Hmm... the last time I needed to resize how much Ubuntu got, the directions I used didn't have me download anything new. I just had to go into the Windows side and edit an existing file. I just can't remember which file, or what I was supposed to do to it. Change a number, yes, but there was more to it than that, I think.

But I'll keep this on file in case I need it. Thanks!

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lightning_rose April 22 2013, 02:25:57 UTC

No, you need gparted, or it's equivalent, and you need to boot from CD-ROM, or a flash drive. Trust me. :)

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tcpip April 22 2013, 05:54:19 UTC
Yeah, seconded. Gparted or KDE Partition manager if you're using that desktop environment. That's really the only safe way to resize partitions on a disk... and even, the caveat of back up your data first on an external drive or remote site applies a thousand times over. You might make a mistake.

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