Hi Nic.

A bit of googling found me at the following link:

http://www.file-recovery.com/recovery-understanding-file-system-ntfs.htm

Long and short of it is that the NTFS partition layout wants certain
components to be at defined offsets from the beginning of the partition.

So in moving the partition by 200MB, it need to keep the partition contents
in exactly the order in which it found them. Otherwise Windows is likely
to chuck a major hissy fit and tell you that the partition is corrupted or
missing.


A bit like a library shelf. If you want to add books at the left end,
you need to start by moving all the other books to the right, starting
at the right hand end. You just can't move "A to C" to the end of "Z"
end without getting the entire alphabet out of sequence.

(Your librarian would quickly relieve you of a few choice bits of your
anatomy.)

Well it seems like a reasonable analogy. :-)

Regards,
Morrrie.

-----Original Message-----
From: luv-main [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Nic Baxter via 
luv-main
Sent: Thursday, 31 January 2019 12:16 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: moving partition

Hi All

I am moving a 1TB NTFS partition 200MB to the right using gparted and of 
course it is very slow. I don't understand why gparted is moving all of 
the data. Why not just move 200MB and add it to the end of the 
partition? My googling only tells me how to do it but not why.

Cheers

Nic

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