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GNOME Partition Editor for creating, reorganizing, and deleting disk partitions. It uses libparted from the parted project to discover and manipulate segmentation tables. Optional file organization tools permit managing file systems not included in libparted.

Features

  • Create partition tables (e.g., MSDOS, GPT)
  • Create, delete, copy, resize, move, cheque, fix new UUID, or label partitions
  • Dispense btrfs, exfat, ext2/iii/iv, f2fs, FAT16/32, hfs/hfs+, linux-swap, luks, lvm2 pv, nilfs2, NTFS, reiserfs/4, udf, ufs, and xfs file systems
  • Enable and disable segmentation flags (eastward.one thousand., boot, hidden)
  • Align partitions to mebibyte (MiB) or cylinder boundaries
  • Attempt information rescue from lost partitions
  • Supports hardware RAID, motherboard BIOS RAID, Linux software RAID
  • Supports all sector sizes (e.g., 512, 1024, 2048, 4096 byte sectors)

License

GNU General Public License version 2.0 (GPLv2)

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User Ratings

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ease 1 of 5 2 of 5 3 of 5 iv of v 5 of v 4 / v

features one of v 2 of 5 3 of 5 4 of v 5 of five iv / v

blueprint 1 of 5 2 of 5 three of 5 4 of 5 5 of five 4 / 5

support 1 of v 2 of 5 3 of 5 4 of 5 5 of 5 4 / 5

User Reviews

  • use information technology often to resize servers / VMs

  • Very handy alive distro for modifying disks and partitions. My merely complaint nearly parted/GParted (not specifically this alive distro) is that it doesn't/tin't manage LVM volumes. Just the live distro does include the required LVM (commandline) tools pre-installed, so it's easy enough to also manage LVM. It would be nice though if in that location were some GUI LVM tool somewhat like GParted.

  • I used Rufus 3.nine to create a bootable USB. It boots but when I try to practice annihilation (select the first option in the carte du jour) I keep getting ACHI host controller unavailable. According to device director there are two ACHI storage controllers! The bios is UEFI. Perchance the hardware is likewise new. I congenital the machine in January: I9700 CPU on ASRock Extreme4 MB, a Sabrent NVME SSD connected on the MB and a hynix two.v" SATA SSD. Video and sound are on MB. Machine works great and is multiple times faster than the i that I built 7 years ago and which was most state of the art then and still working fine equally my #2 machine. It hangs on the no ACHI bulletin. Starting time time I had to turn off and on to reboot; next time I used ctrl-alt-del to reboot.

  • Actually this is Non Gparted itself, only an ISO paradigm for an extremely poor and antique Linux distribution, that has many bug. Notably this ISO is not secure bootable, does not back up many hardware devices on the motherboard (due east.m. wifi, graphics drivers needed to boot and return the needed X11 environment, missing microcode updates for modern CPUs or GPUs, required by the kernel provided that will block some common ranges AMD and Intel processors without the microcodes!). Gparted itself is an excellent product just separately from this Linux distrib. Instead of using this, download a modern ISO distrib built later on mid-2019 (and then that they support the microcode updates from Intel and AMD after the Spectre/Meltdown issue), and a Linux kernel version iv at least. Then use the "RUFUS" freeware to create a bootable USB from this ISO (note: RUFUS includes a builtin support to download and install Linux on your USB key) One time you have booted Linux on the USB (you may eventually need to disable Secure boot in your UEFI BIOS settings if your BIOS does not recognize the UEFI bootloader on the USB), Gparted is generally included in the alive distrib (yous don't demand to install Linux on your PC, Linux runs in a RAMdisk), just if demand y'all can utilize "sudo apt install gparted" (it volition install it in the alive ramdisk, not on any deejay of your PC). Starting time make a stability exam in this live distrib: open up Firefox, visit a media-heavy website like Youtube (launch a video, it should be smooth without lags), or endeavour playing a video that you have added onto your USB key or a DVD, or open a command to launch a "Prime test" or similar benchmark/test tools: your PC should not hang or crash. Simply when you've done this test to brand sure the Linux Alive distrib is stable, you tin can launch Gparted from this Linux live that will permit you to edit/copy/backup/move/resize your partitions. So DON'T use this poor Linux distrib: information technology does NOT work reliably on many PCs, and an antique Linux distrib and missing drivers can be very dangerous for your data, your deejay partitions may finally be definitely corrupted if Gparted crashes in the center. Note: before copying or moving a sectionalisation with Gparted, kickoff first by reducing its size to the minimum (which depends on the book of data stored in the filesystem), and apply. It will and so salvage y'all a lot of time when moving/copying partitions. For non-filesystem partitions, resizing is not proposed, you tin can only copy/motion them as is. Note finally that you should have a Windows recovery USB key in some cases, in lodge to be able to : - or employ "DISKPART" or "MOUNTVOL" to mountain the partitions you want to setup for your windows kick: mounting allow inspecting what is in each partition and it facilitates the utilise of BCDEDIT - launch "BCDEDIT" and fix the boot guild or change the bulldoze letters in the BCD information. Make sure yous have understood how BCDEDIT works (BCDEDIT on Windows allows you to manage the kicking entries, but its syntax is quite complex. It is however frequently needed when your PC no logner works or if the Windows recovery environs "repair this PC" is unable to correctly find the correct UEFI organisation FAT32 partitioning (ESP), which should be the only one marked Agile on ALL your disk drives, or the right NTFS sectionalisation containing the windows recovery tools, or the correct NTFS partition containing the Windows installation C: and the hypernation file for resume.). If you accept a problem with resuming Windows, deleting the hybernation file is possible in Linux: Windows on the next boot wsill recreate it as needed (unless Windows has been setup to remove the hibernation). On modern PCs with SSD and "Fastboot" suppport in your UEFI bios, you lot don't demand hibernation, as Windows can make a full boot in a few seconds, faster than from hibernation (notably on PCs with lot of RAM: loading a giant hibernation file of several gigabytes, is much longer than a obviously boot), so disable it in Windows with "POWERCFG" from an ambassador CMD window (information technology will relieve several gigabytes on your SSD!) Beaside that, "Gparted" is excellent but ONLY on a decent Linux distrib, only NOT in this one.

  • Great product, have used it for years. Information technology works well on all drives and usb drives.

    1 user found this review helpful.

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Additional Project Details

Programming Linguistic communication

C++
2004-07-31