NTFSRESIZE
Section: Maintenance Commands (8)
Updated: February 2006
Index
Return to Main Contents
NAME
ntfsresize - resize an NTFS filesystem without data loss
SYNOPSIS
ntfsresize
[OPTIONS]
--info(-mb-only)
DEVICE
ntfsresize
[OPTIONS]
[--size SIZE[k|M|G]]
DEVICE
DESCRIPTION
The
ntfsresize
program safely resizes Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, Windows 2000, Windows
NT4 and Longhorn NTFS filesystems without data loss. All NTFS versions are
supported, used by 32-bit and 64-bit Windows.
Defragmentation is NOT required prior to resizing
because the program can relocate any data if needed, without risking data
integrity.
Ntfsresize can be used to shrink or enlarge any NTFS filesystem located
on an unmounted
DEVICE
(usually a disk partition). The new filesystem will have
SIZE
bytes.
The
SIZE
parameter may have one of the optional modifiers
k,
M,
G,
which means the
SIZE
parameter is given in kilo-, mega- or gigabytes respectively.
Ntfsresize
conforms to the SI, ATA, IEEE standards and the disk manufacturers
by using k=10^3, M=10^6 and G=10^9.
If both
--info(-mb-only)
and
--size
are omitted then the
NTFS filesystem will be enlarged to the underlying
DEVICE
size.
To resize a filesystem on a partition, you must resize BOTH the filesystem
and the partition by editing the partition table on the disk. Similarly to
other command line filesystem resizers,
ntfsresize
doesn't manipulate the size of the partitions, hence
to do that you must use a disk partitioning tool as well, for example
fdisk(8).
Alternatively you could use one of the many user friendly partitioners that
uses
ntfsresize
internally, like Mandriva's DiskDrake, QTParted, SUSE/Novell's YaST Partitioner,
IBM's EVMS, GParted or Debian/Ubuntu's Partman.
IMPORTANT!
It's a good practice making REGULAR BACKUPS of your valuable data, especially
before using ANY partitioning tools. To do so for NTFS, you could use
ntfsclone(8).
Don't forget to save the partition table as well!
Shrinkage
If you wish to shrink an NTFS partition, first use
ntfsresize
to shrink the size of the filesystem. Then you could use
fdisk(8)
to shrink the size of the partition by deleting the
partition and recreating it with the smaller size.
Do not make the partition smaller than the new size of
NTFS otherwise you won't be able to boot. If you did so notwithstanding
then just recreate the partition to be as large as NTFS.
Enlargement
To enlarge an NTFS filesystem, first you must enlarge the size of the
underlying partition. This can be done using
fdisk(8)
by deleting the partition and recreating it with a larger size.
Make sure it will not overlap with an other existing partition.
Then you may use
ntfsresize
to enlarge the size of the filesystem.
Partitioning
When recreating the partition by a disk partitioning tool,
make sure you create it at the same
starting sector and with the same partition type as before.
Otherwise you won't be able to access your filesystem. Use the 'u'
fdisk command to switch to the reliable sector unit from the
default cylinder one.
Also make sure you set the bootable flag for the partition if it
existed before. Failing to do so you might not be able to boot your
computer from the disk.
OPTIONS
Below is a summary of all the options that
ntfsresize
accepts. Nearly all options have two equivalent names. The short name is
preceded by
-
and the long name is preceded by
--.
Any single letter options, that don't take an argument, can be combined into a
single command, e.g.
-fv
is equivalent to
-f -v.
Long named options can be abbreviated to any unique prefix of their name.
- -c, --check
-
By using this option ntfsresize will only check the device to ensure that it
is ready to be resized. If not, it will print any errors detected.
If the device is fine, nothing will be printed.
- -i, --info
-
By using this option ntfsresize will determine the theoretically smallest
shrunken filesystem size supported. Most of the time the result is the space
already used on the filesystem. Ntfsresize will refuse shrinking to a
smaller size than what you got by this option and depending on several
factors it might be unable to shrink very close to this theoretical
size. Although the integrity of your data should be never in risk,
it's still strongly recommended to make a test run by using the
--no-action option before real resizing.
Practically the smallest shrunken size generally is
at around "used space" + (20-200 MB). Please also take into account
that Windows might need about 50-100 MB free space left to boot safely.
This option never causes any changes to the filesystem, the partition is
opened read-only.
- -m, --info-mb-only
-
Like the info option, only print out the shrinkable size in MB. Print nothing
if the shrink size is the same as the original size (in MB).
- -s, --size SIZE[k|M|G]
-
Resize filesystem to SIZE[k|M|G] bytes.
The optional modifiers
k,
M,
G
mean the
SIZE
parameter is given in kilo-, mega- or gigabytes respectively.
Conforming to standards, k=10^3, M=10^6 and G=10^9. Use this option
with
--no-action
first.
- -f, --force
-
Forces ntfsresize to proceed with the resize operation even if the filesystem
is marked for consistency check.
Please note, ntfsresize always marks the filesystem
for consistency check before a real resize operation
and it leaves that way for extra
safety. Thus if NTFS was marked by ntfsresize then it's safe to
use this option. If you need
to resize several times without booting into Windows between each
resizing steps then you must use this option.
- -n, --no-action
-
Use this option to make a test run before doing the real resize operation.
Volume will be opened read-only and
ntfsresize
displays what it would do if it were to resize the filesystem.
Continue with the real resizing only if the test run passed.
- -b, --bad-sectors
-
Support disks having hardware errors, bad sectors with those
ntfsresize
would refuse to work by default.
Prior using this option, it's strongly recommended to make a backup by
ntfsclone(8)
using the --rescue option, then running 'chkdsk /f /r volume:' on Windows
from the command line. If the disk guarantee is still valid then replace it.
It's defected. Please also note, that no software can repair these type of
hardware errors. The most what they can do is to work around the permanent
defects.
This option doesn't have any effect if the disk is flawless.
- -P, --no-progress-bar
-
Don't show progress bars.
- -v, --verbose
-
More output.
- -V, --version
-
Print the version number of
ntfsresize
and exit.
- -h, --help
-
Display help and exit.
EXIT CODES
The exit code is 0 on success, non-zero otherwise.
KNOWN ISSUES
No reliability problem is known. If you need
help please try the Ntfsresize FAQ first (see below) and if you
don't find your answer then send your question, comment or bug report to
the development team:
linux-ntfs-dev@lists.sourceforge.net
There are a few very rarely met restrictions at present: filesystems having
unknown bad sectors, relocation
of the first MFT extent and resizing into the middle of a $MFTMirr extent
aren't supported yet. These cases are detected and
resizing is restricted to a safe size or the closest safe
size is displayed.
Ntfsresize
schedules an NTFS consistency check and
after the first boot into Windows you must see
chkdsk
running on a blue background. This is intentional and no need to worry about it.
Windows may force a quick reboot after the consistency check.
Moreover after repartitioning your disk and depending on the
hardware configuration, the Windows message
System Settings Change
may also appear. Just acknowledge it and reboot again.
The disk geometry handling semantic (HDIO_GETGEO ioctl) has changed
in an incompatible way in Linux 2.6 kernels and this triggered multitudinous
partition table corruptions resulting in unbootable Windows systems, even if
NTFS was consistent, if
parted(8)
was involved in some way. This problem was often attributed to ntfsresize
but in fact it's completely independent of NTFS thus ntfsresize. Moreover
ntfsresize never touches the partition table at all. By changing
the 'Disk Access Mode' to LBA in the BIOS makes booting work
again, most of the time. You can find more information about this issue
in the Troubleshooting section of the below referred Ntfsresize FAQ.
AUTHORS
ntfsresize
was written by Szabolcs Szakacsits, with contributions from Anton Altaparmakov
and Richard Russon.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Many thanks to Anton Altaparmakov and Richard Russon
for libntfs, the excellent documentation and comments,
to Gergely Madarasz, Dewey M. Sasser and Miguel Lastra and his colleagues
at the University of Granada for their continuous and highly valuable help,
furthermore to Erik Meade, Martin Fick, Sandro Hawke, Dave Croal,
Lorrin Nelson, Geert Hendrickx, Robert Bjorkman and Richard Burdick
for beta testing the relocation support, to Florian Eyben, Fritz Oppliger,
Richard Ebling, Sid-Ahmed Touati, Jan Kiszka, Benjamin Redelings, Christopher
Haney, Ryan Durk, Ralf Beyer, Scott Hansen, Alan Evans for the valued
contributions and to Theodore Ts'o whose
resize2fs(8)
man page originally formed the basis of this page.
AVAILABILITY
ntfsresize
is part of the
ntfsprogs
package and is available from:
http://www.linux-ntfs.org/content/view/19/37
The manual pages are available online at:
http://man.linux-ntfs.org/
Ntfsresize
related news, example of usage, troubleshooting, statically linked binary and
FAQ (frequently asked questions) are maintained at:
http://mlf.linux.rulez.org/mlf/ezaz/ntfsresize.html
SEE ALSO
fdisk(8),
cfdisk(8),
sfdisk(8),
parted(8),
evms(8),
ntfsclone(8),
mkntfs(8),
ntfsprogs(8)