Topic: [SOLVED]Complex resizing question
Hi,I have a somewhat complex resizing question concerning a single hard drive that is partitioned into multiple drives with Win XP and Linux both installed on it.First,the windows partitions,C: drive is the primary partition formatted in FAT 32,not ntfs.The next partitions are logical drives in the extended partition.The D: drive is in FAT 32,E: drive is in FAT32,F: drive is in FAT32,and G: drive is in FAT 32.
Everything after the C: drive is in the extended partition.I also have Kubuntu 7.04 in a linux partition divided as root 9.5 GB,/media/home 22 GB,swap 1 GB.
I made my C: primary partition way too small,4GB and have run out of room even though I try to install programs to the other partitions.I have plenty of room to resize D: (29 GB) to lend C: (4GB) more room,but I don't know if I can do that because D: is a logical drive in the extended partition.D: has some data that can be copied,E: has video games that can be re-installed,F: has music that could be reinstalled,but G: has a backup of another hard drive that I don't want to lose if possible.
Can Gparted help me to resize D: (even if I have to delete the data on it) AND be able to make the extra space available to the C: drive,without destroying any of the other partitions and most importantly the Linux install?
Basically,I need to borrow room from an extended partition and give the space to a primary partition without killing anything else on the drive.
Thanks for any help you can give me.