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  • katzdvd
    Lord of Digital Video
    Lord of Digital Video
    • Feb 2006
    • 2198

    Never mind! I think I fixed it - unmounted drives on desktop & it seems to have worked! Will keep you updated

    Comment

    • katzdvd
      Lord of Digital Video
      Lord of Digital Video
      • Feb 2006
      • 2198

      Did have another one for you; In creating the "home" partition, is that created as a "primary partition?" If you change it to extended, you cannot select the file system type?

      Comment

      • anonymez
        Super Moderator
        • Mar 2004
        • 5525

        Select Primary Partition.
        "What were the things in Gremlins called?" - Karl Pilkington

        Comment

        • katzdvd
          Lord of Digital Video
          Lord of Digital Video
          • Feb 2006
          • 2198

          I did that; Now I still have 162 gb unallocated space, that I want to use for data partition, but when I try, I am getting message that it is not possible to create more than 4 primary partitions.

          Comment

          • anonymez
            Super Moderator
            • Mar 2004
            • 5525

            Set the home partition to extended, should be ext3. Then you should be able to set the Data to Primary.
            "What were the things in Gremlins called?" - Karl Pilkington

            Comment

            • katzdvd
              Lord of Digital Video
              Lord of Digital Video
              • Feb 2006
              • 2198

              Set the home partition to extended.
              I tried that, & the partition was "unallocated". I was fooling around some more, & well, I did a good one now....Somehow, I just now wiped the entire drive, windows & all...

              Now I am truly starting from a clean slate. Not exactly what I had in mind, but at least I didn't lose anything important on windows, just wasting alot of time...

              Comment

              • Chewy
                Super Moderator
                • Nov 2003
                • 18971

                looks like the penguin killed the leopard seal

                Comment

                • katzdvd
                  Lord of Digital Video
                  Lord of Digital Video
                  • Feb 2006
                  • 2198

                  On the desktop, the drive is still showing up, & windows is still in there. Does that mean that windows is still in place, even though GParted shows it as being erased?

                  Comment

                  • katzdvd
                    Lord of Digital Video
                    Lord of Digital Video
                    • Feb 2006
                    • 2198

                    looks like the penguin killed the leopard seal
                    Died long ago, just too stupid to realize it yet! (or maybe it's just the nerves, final body impulses, shutting down)

                    Comment

                    • anonymez
                      Super Moderator
                      • Mar 2004
                      • 5525

                      Did you hit apply? GParted will not make any changes to your drive till you do so; if you did not, just close GParted and run it again. As with any partitioning tool, be very careful and double-check what you're doing.
                      "What were the things in Gremlins called?" - Karl Pilkington

                      Comment

                      • katzdvd
                        Lord of Digital Video
                        Lord of Digital Video
                        • Feb 2006
                        • 2198

                        Did you hit apply?


                        Oh you bet! I don't believe in doing anything halfway!
                        As with any partitioning tool, be very careful and double-check what you're doing.
                        Guess it's a good thing I don't operate on people for a living!

                        Comment

                        • anonymez
                          Super Moderator
                          • Mar 2004
                          • 5525

                          LOL, same thing happened to me once... except with XP's partition tool. Just be glad you did not lose any important data.
                          "What were the things in Gremlins called?" - Karl Pilkington

                          Comment

                          • katzdvd
                            Lord of Digital Video
                            Lord of Digital Video
                            • Feb 2006
                            • 2198

                            anony - try as I might, I cannot get a 4th partition created.

                            sda1 - windows
                            sda2 - root
                            sda3 - linux swap
                            sda4/5 - created as extended partition (home)

                            I cannot get the remaining space to partition as a data partition. If I do not create the extended partition, that is when I get the "no more than 4 primary" partitions message.

                            It seems I cannot do it either way, no way no how can I create another partition. Where am I going wrong on this?

                            Comment

                            • anonymez
                              Super Moderator
                              • Mar 2004
                              • 5525

                              Make it so:

                              sda1 - Windows (primary)
                              sda2 - root (primary) (or logical? can't remember)
                              sda3 - home (extended)
                              sda4 - swap
                              sda5 - Data (primary)

                              If you're having trouble, just run the installer and it should guide you through the partitioning process.

                              A brief explanation of the two types:

                              3.3. Primary Partitions

                              The number of partitions on an Intel-based system was limited from the very beginning: The original partition table was installed as part of the boot sector and held space for only four partition entries. These partitions are now called primary partitions.

                              3.4. Logical Partitions

                              One primary partition of a hard drive may be subpartitioned. These are logical partitions. This effectively allows us to skirt the historical four partition limitation.

                              The primary partition used to house the logical partitions is called an extended partition and it has its own file system type (0x05). Unlike primary partitions, logical partitions must be contiguous. Each logical partition contains a pointer to the next logical partition, which implies that the number of logical partitions is unlimited. However, linux imposes limits on the total number of any type of prtition on a drive, so this effectively limits the number of logical partitions. This is at most 15 partitions total on an SCSI disk and 63 total on an IDE disk.
                              Last edited by anonymez; 10 May 2007, 01:43 PM.
                              "What were the things in Gremlins called?" - Karl Pilkington

                              Comment

                              • katzdvd
                                Lord of Digital Video
                                Lord of Digital Video
                                • Feb 2006
                                • 2198

                                The farther I go with this, the dumber I seem to be getting Did what you said, still can't get it done, same results as post 238. Decided to partition thru the installer instead of GParted, but using that, I can't get the option to create any of the partitions as NTFS.

                                Plus, it wants to create a root partition first before windows, which I guess doesn't matter, but I am still unable to create any partitions as NTFS using the install method.

                                I guess my best shot at this is to run GParted again & be satisfied with the way I had it before, omitting the Home partition. I could create that at a later time, if I finally figure out how, I suppose.

                                Comment

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