Topic: Reorganising Partitions on a Dell laptop with WinXP
(1.) I am new here. I have a Dell Inspiron 1520 laptop which came with three primary partitions and an extended partition containing a logical drive, together occupying the entire disc space.
(2.) My aim is to create space for installing a Linux OS, and separate working area for my personal files, but preserving the original WinXP (as far as possible).
(3.) I have tried to describe the details of my problem and questions as numbered points for easy reference. I am not generally familiar with the working of computers, as I have mainly used an old assembled desktop so far as just a word processor (Word97) running with Win98.
(4.) The laptop configuration is the basic default for this model -- Inspiron 1520. The main specifications are:
<>Memory: 1 GB RAM
<>Hard drive: 80 GB (SATA)
<>Processor: Intel (R) Core 2 Duo (also described as: Dual CPU T2310 @ 1.46 GHz)
<>Operating system: Windows XP Home, version 5.1.2600, Service Pack 2.0
<>Optical drive; CD writer and DVD reader - combo drive
<>Word processor software: MS Works 8.5 (not MS Office ! )
[If the above details are inadequate, I can furnish whatever else is needed by referring to the properties files]
(5.) The partitions other than the C: drive are hidden, and I could detect them only by viewing 'Disk Management'. I also read the XP help files and succeeded in installing 'Recovery Console' as a startup option, from where the 'diskpart' command provided details of all the existing partitions as follows:
Header information: "76 317 MB -- Disk 0 -- at Id 0 -- on Bus 0 -- on atapi [MBR]"
(Drive) -- (Partn. No.) -- (Type) -- (Size) -- <Free Space>
? -- Partition1 -- [FAT] -- 78 MB -- <70 MB>
C: -- Partition2 -- [NTFS] -- 70 598 MB -- <65 356 MB>
(-) -- Unpartitioned space -- [-] -- 8 MB --
F: -- Partition4 <media direct> -- [FAT32] -- 2557 MB -- <1822 MB>
E: -- Partition3 -- [FAT32] -- 3075 MB -- <679 MB>
The first drive (unlettered) is described elsewhere as 'EISA configuration'.
(6.) I was able to use a GParted live CD (created from an image file "gparted-live-0.3.6-7.iso") which displayed essentially the same information, summarised below:
/dev/sda -- 74.53 GB
/dev/sda1 -- fat16/primary -- 78.41 MB (8.03M used + 70.38M free)
/dev/sda2 -- ntfs/primary/Boot -- 68.94 GB (6.59 used + 62.35 free)
not allocated -- 7.84 MB
/dev/sda3 -- Extended/lba -- 2.50 GB
/dev/sda5 -- fat32/logical -- 2.50 GB (734.6M used + 1.78G free)
/dev/sda4 -- fat32/primary -- 3.00 GB (2.34G used + 679.6M free)
(7.) I succeeded in using Gparted to shrink the C: drive to 14.65 GB, thus creating unallocated space of 54.30GB. But I am hesitant to take any further steps because any possible corruption of the E: or F: drives (hidden by the Dell installation) might result in malfunctioning of WinXP. Use of the 'recovery' discs will probably attempt to restore the factory settings. The Dell system does not allow any access to those partitions. I suppose they are required in case of system crash.
I cannot make a screen shot, but the partition boxes from left to right are presently as follows:
sda1 (0.08G) / sda2 (14,65G) / unallocated (54.3G) / [(sda3)=sda5] (2.5G) / sda4(3.0G)
(8.) I now wish to employ the free 54.3 GB space in the most effective way, using the GParted (or any other) tool, and my basic question here in this forum is:
(9.) Is it possible by any means (like copying and deleting) to convert the primary sda4 (E:) into a logical drive in the extended partition (to be suitably enlarged), so that a free primary is available for the Linux OS?
(10.) I am open to any advice, but what I would like to have ultimately is somewhat as follows, unless some alternative arrangement is advisable:
sda1 -- no change (~0.08G)
sda2 -- no further change (14.65G)
unallocated -- (~5G)
sda3 -- extended (~??G) [containing four logical drives initially]
original sda5 -- logical (2.5G)
original sda4 -- logical (3.0G), previously primary
sda? (new) -- logical (~20G) for personal files
linux swap -- logical? (~2G)
sda? (new) -- primary (~20G) for Linux OS and other open source programmes
(11.) If something like the above is feasible, I would be grateful for some advice (in layman's language) on how to go about achieving it, and what are the possible pitfalls. The GParted help files do not seem to cover this kind of situation. Is it advisable to have the primary linux partition before the unallocated space following sda2?
(12.) If a change like this (converting sda4 from primary to logical) is not practical, is it all right if I have the Linux OS also on the extended partition as a logical drive. Hope this is not a silly question!
(13.) In the worst case I may have to lose either or both the hidden E: and F: drives, and hope that WinXP will function properly without them. I wish to steadily get familiar with Linux and start using it exclusively, but I was told that having a Windows alternative is advisable. I was warned against opting for Vista. The XP option was not available here (I am located in Madras, India), so the laptop was purchased for me in the US in December 2007, but I haven't found the time to start using it so far. I am still managing with my old desktop
(14.) I want to try and do the re-partitioning exercise by myself, however slowly and cautiously, rather than ask for help from local 'experts' whose competence I cannot gauge, and whose time or patience may be limited (or their capacity to "explain" things to a novice). No meaningful help is available from Dell here because the default limited mail-in service is valid only in the US.
(15.) I have a rather slow/erratic dial-up connection, so my internet access is irregular, and I will not be able to interact quickly in the forum if there is further information or feedback needed from me. I hope anyone who responds to this will excuse my slow responses.
Thanks for your patience in reading through all this!
=TeeSquare=