how to allocate space from windows to ubuntu? [duplicate]












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  • How to resize partitions?

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I had 2 os on my computer Windows and Ubuntu, I wanted to remove windows and did this with OS uninstaller,but all the space from windows left there and I cant move that space to my ubuntu using Gpartedheres screenshot of my gparted
The ext3 is deleted Windows and i need to move that space to ubuntu(ext4). Thanks for Help.










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marked as duplicate by karel, Kulfy, guiverc, George Udosen, user535733 Dec 25 '18 at 14:50


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.




















    0
















    This question already has an answer here:




    • How to resize partitions?

      4 answers




    I had 2 os on my computer Windows and Ubuntu, I wanted to remove windows and did this with OS uninstaller,but all the space from windows left there and I cant move that space to my ubuntu using Gpartedheres screenshot of my gparted
    The ext3 is deleted Windows and i need to move that space to ubuntu(ext4). Thanks for Help.










    share|improve this question













    marked as duplicate by karel, Kulfy, guiverc, George Udosen, user535733 Dec 25 '18 at 14:50


    This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.


















      0












      0








      0









      This question already has an answer here:




      • How to resize partitions?

        4 answers




      I had 2 os on my computer Windows and Ubuntu, I wanted to remove windows and did this with OS uninstaller,but all the space from windows left there and I cant move that space to my ubuntu using Gpartedheres screenshot of my gparted
      The ext3 is deleted Windows and i need to move that space to ubuntu(ext4). Thanks for Help.










      share|improve this question















      This question already has an answer here:




      • How to resize partitions?

        4 answers




      I had 2 os on my computer Windows and Ubuntu, I wanted to remove windows and did this with OS uninstaller,but all the space from windows left there and I cant move that space to my ubuntu using Gpartedheres screenshot of my gparted
      The ext3 is deleted Windows and i need to move that space to ubuntu(ext4). Thanks for Help.





      This question already has an answer here:




      • How to resize partitions?

        4 answers








      partitioning gparted disk disk-usage unallocated






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      asked Dec 25 '18 at 9:24









      j doej doe

      1




      1




      marked as duplicate by karel, Kulfy, guiverc, George Udosen, user535733 Dec 25 '18 at 14:50


      This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






      marked as duplicate by karel, Kulfy, guiverc, George Udosen, user535733 Dec 25 '18 at 14:50


      This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
























          1 Answer
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          There are 2 problems: the first one is that the partitions are locked - you can see the little key icons next to the partition names. The partitions are locked because they are mounted and they are mounted because you booted from them. The easiest way around this is to boot from a live USB or CD (a live Ubuntu CD for example). Then you can unmount the partitions if they still happen to be mounted.



          Next problem: since your Linux partition is inside of an extended partition (/dev/sda2), you have to first resize the extended partition, and then finally you'll be able to resize /dev/sda6.



          Finally: it looks like you have plenty of disk space so I recommend giving the swap partition (/dev/sda5) a little bit of space - maybe 1Gbyte.






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            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

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            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

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            active

            oldest

            votes









            0














            There are 2 problems: the first one is that the partitions are locked - you can see the little key icons next to the partition names. The partitions are locked because they are mounted and they are mounted because you booted from them. The easiest way around this is to boot from a live USB or CD (a live Ubuntu CD for example). Then you can unmount the partitions if they still happen to be mounted.



            Next problem: since your Linux partition is inside of an extended partition (/dev/sda2), you have to first resize the extended partition, and then finally you'll be able to resize /dev/sda6.



            Finally: it looks like you have plenty of disk space so I recommend giving the swap partition (/dev/sda5) a little bit of space - maybe 1Gbyte.






            share|improve this answer




























              0














              There are 2 problems: the first one is that the partitions are locked - you can see the little key icons next to the partition names. The partitions are locked because they are mounted and they are mounted because you booted from them. The easiest way around this is to boot from a live USB or CD (a live Ubuntu CD for example). Then you can unmount the partitions if they still happen to be mounted.



              Next problem: since your Linux partition is inside of an extended partition (/dev/sda2), you have to first resize the extended partition, and then finally you'll be able to resize /dev/sda6.



              Finally: it looks like you have plenty of disk space so I recommend giving the swap partition (/dev/sda5) a little bit of space - maybe 1Gbyte.






              share|improve this answer


























                0












                0








                0







                There are 2 problems: the first one is that the partitions are locked - you can see the little key icons next to the partition names. The partitions are locked because they are mounted and they are mounted because you booted from them. The easiest way around this is to boot from a live USB or CD (a live Ubuntu CD for example). Then you can unmount the partitions if they still happen to be mounted.



                Next problem: since your Linux partition is inside of an extended partition (/dev/sda2), you have to first resize the extended partition, and then finally you'll be able to resize /dev/sda6.



                Finally: it looks like you have plenty of disk space so I recommend giving the swap partition (/dev/sda5) a little bit of space - maybe 1Gbyte.






                share|improve this answer













                There are 2 problems: the first one is that the partitions are locked - you can see the little key icons next to the partition names. The partitions are locked because they are mounted and they are mounted because you booted from them. The easiest way around this is to boot from a live USB or CD (a live Ubuntu CD for example). Then you can unmount the partitions if they still happen to be mounted.



                Next problem: since your Linux partition is inside of an extended partition (/dev/sda2), you have to first resize the extended partition, and then finally you'll be able to resize /dev/sda6.



                Finally: it looks like you have plenty of disk space so I recommend giving the swap partition (/dev/sda5) a little bit of space - maybe 1Gbyte.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Dec 25 '18 at 10:22









                Eric MintzEric Mintz

                584112




                584112















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