Partitioning your HD using GParted

WARNING: for disk naming Please refer to UUID, Partition Labelling and fstab, as by default sidux uses UUID
Partitioning tools may request a root password, type sux then your password. On a Live-ISO none is set sux then press 'enter' . See: Live Mode

Resizing the NTFS partition requires you to reboot the system immediately! DON'T DO any other operations on this partition before the reboot, otherwise you will get errors. Please read this.

Always back-up your data!

Basics

A partition must have a filesystem. Linux knows different filesystems to use. Ext4 is the recommended format for sidux. ext2 is handy as a storage format as an MS Windows™ driver is available for data-swapping. Ext2 Installable File System For MS Windows.

For normal use we recommend the ext4 file system, it is the default file system for sidux .

The following information has been taken from the GParted Official documentation and been modified to be a guide to using GParted within sidux, and should not be seen as a definitive guide. E&OE

For full documentation see GParted

Using GParted

Creating and managing partitions is not something that is typically done every day. Therefore, a good idea is to read this guide once, to get comfortable with the concepts and some of the panels that will appear.

NTFS partition Resizing

Resizing the NTFS partition requires you to reboot the system immediately! DON'T DO any other operations on this partition before the reboot, otherwise you will get errors.

Full GParted documentation: To read the full documentation including, How-To copy partitions please go to GParted

Content last revised 01/02/2010 1140 UTC