Move Win7 partition to another disk
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I have a problem: my HP Stream has a 32GB built-in drive, and the software updates to Win7 need more space :-(
The partitions on the 32GB drive are:
- EFI
- MS protected
- Win7
- Windows recovery
I have a 64GB SHDC card in it, with linux installed (and dual boot). I'd like to swap them (so linux is on the 32GB drive & win7 on the 64GB one). I tried moving the MS protected + win7 partitions to the 64GB drive (after reformatting it), but then windows wouldn't boot and insisted on doing a full system recovery.
How can I move the installed Win7 to the 64GB drive?
- which partitions to move?
- what other changes to make (apart from post-move linux install)?
p.s. I've read the other answers relating to moving windows partitions, and they all assume that the old drive will be replaced by the new one. That isn't the case for me. I want to keep the existing drive as the boot drive, and move windows to another drive and have it dual bootable with linux on the old drive ...
windows-7 hard-drive system-reserved-partition
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down vote
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I have a problem: my HP Stream has a 32GB built-in drive, and the software updates to Win7 need more space :-(
The partitions on the 32GB drive are:
- EFI
- MS protected
- Win7
- Windows recovery
I have a 64GB SHDC card in it, with linux installed (and dual boot). I'd like to swap them (so linux is on the 32GB drive & win7 on the 64GB one). I tried moving the MS protected + win7 partitions to the 64GB drive (after reformatting it), but then windows wouldn't boot and insisted on doing a full system recovery.
How can I move the installed Win7 to the 64GB drive?
- which partitions to move?
- what other changes to make (apart from post-move linux install)?
p.s. I've read the other answers relating to moving windows partitions, and they all assume that the old drive will be replaced by the new one. That isn't the case for me. I want to keep the existing drive as the boot drive, and move windows to another drive and have it dual bootable with linux on the old drive ...
windows-7 hard-drive system-reserved-partition
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I have a problem: my HP Stream has a 32GB built-in drive, and the software updates to Win7 need more space :-(
The partitions on the 32GB drive are:
- EFI
- MS protected
- Win7
- Windows recovery
I have a 64GB SHDC card in it, with linux installed (and dual boot). I'd like to swap them (so linux is on the 32GB drive & win7 on the 64GB one). I tried moving the MS protected + win7 partitions to the 64GB drive (after reformatting it), but then windows wouldn't boot and insisted on doing a full system recovery.
How can I move the installed Win7 to the 64GB drive?
- which partitions to move?
- what other changes to make (apart from post-move linux install)?
p.s. I've read the other answers relating to moving windows partitions, and they all assume that the old drive will be replaced by the new one. That isn't the case for me. I want to keep the existing drive as the boot drive, and move windows to another drive and have it dual bootable with linux on the old drive ...
windows-7 hard-drive system-reserved-partition
I have a problem: my HP Stream has a 32GB built-in drive, and the software updates to Win7 need more space :-(
The partitions on the 32GB drive are:
- EFI
- MS protected
- Win7
- Windows recovery
I have a 64GB SHDC card in it, with linux installed (and dual boot). I'd like to swap them (so linux is on the 32GB drive & win7 on the 64GB one). I tried moving the MS protected + win7 partitions to the 64GB drive (after reformatting it), but then windows wouldn't boot and insisted on doing a full system recovery.
How can I move the installed Win7 to the 64GB drive?
- which partitions to move?
- what other changes to make (apart from post-move linux install)?
p.s. I've read the other answers relating to moving windows partitions, and they all assume that the old drive will be replaced by the new one. That isn't the case for me. I want to keep the existing drive as the boot drive, and move windows to another drive and have it dual bootable with linux on the old drive ...
windows-7 hard-drive system-reserved-partition
windows-7 hard-drive system-reserved-partition
edited Nov 25 at 7:02
Mureinik
2,23151525
2,23151525
asked Nov 24 at 20:25
JeToJedno
1
1
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1 Answer
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up vote
0
down vote
With dual boot you must have grub installed.
The following procedure might work:
Copy the Win7 contents to the 64GB drive- Let grub discover it so having 2 Win7 installations
- Verify that the new Win7 installation can boot
- Install Linux over the previous Win7 partition and update grub.
Take a backup image of the 32GB disk first and have some means of restoring it,
just in case.
You will not be able to copy Windows from within Windows, so you will need
to use a tool such as
AOMEI Backupper Freeware
and ensure you can boot it.
Do not use a Linux Live CD/USB to copy Windows files.
I remark that an SHDC card is not as safe a media as a hard disk
(nor as fast),
so you should be careful with backups.
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
With dual boot you must have grub installed.
The following procedure might work:
Copy the Win7 contents to the 64GB drive- Let grub discover it so having 2 Win7 installations
- Verify that the new Win7 installation can boot
- Install Linux over the previous Win7 partition and update grub.
Take a backup image of the 32GB disk first and have some means of restoring it,
just in case.
You will not be able to copy Windows from within Windows, so you will need
to use a tool such as
AOMEI Backupper Freeware
and ensure you can boot it.
Do not use a Linux Live CD/USB to copy Windows files.
I remark that an SHDC card is not as safe a media as a hard disk
(nor as fast),
so you should be careful with backups.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
With dual boot you must have grub installed.
The following procedure might work:
Copy the Win7 contents to the 64GB drive- Let grub discover it so having 2 Win7 installations
- Verify that the new Win7 installation can boot
- Install Linux over the previous Win7 partition and update grub.
Take a backup image of the 32GB disk first and have some means of restoring it,
just in case.
You will not be able to copy Windows from within Windows, so you will need
to use a tool such as
AOMEI Backupper Freeware
and ensure you can boot it.
Do not use a Linux Live CD/USB to copy Windows files.
I remark that an SHDC card is not as safe a media as a hard disk
(nor as fast),
so you should be careful with backups.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
With dual boot you must have grub installed.
The following procedure might work:
Copy the Win7 contents to the 64GB drive- Let grub discover it so having 2 Win7 installations
- Verify that the new Win7 installation can boot
- Install Linux over the previous Win7 partition and update grub.
Take a backup image of the 32GB disk first and have some means of restoring it,
just in case.
You will not be able to copy Windows from within Windows, so you will need
to use a tool such as
AOMEI Backupper Freeware
and ensure you can boot it.
Do not use a Linux Live CD/USB to copy Windows files.
I remark that an SHDC card is not as safe a media as a hard disk
(nor as fast),
so you should be careful with backups.
With dual boot you must have grub installed.
The following procedure might work:
Copy the Win7 contents to the 64GB drive- Let grub discover it so having 2 Win7 installations
- Verify that the new Win7 installation can boot
- Install Linux over the previous Win7 partition and update grub.
Take a backup image of the 32GB disk first and have some means of restoring it,
just in case.
You will not be able to copy Windows from within Windows, so you will need
to use a tool such as
AOMEI Backupper Freeware
and ensure you can boot it.
Do not use a Linux Live CD/USB to copy Windows files.
I remark that an SHDC card is not as safe a media as a hard disk
(nor as fast),
so you should be careful with backups.
answered Nov 24 at 21:07
harrymc
249k10257550
249k10257550
add a comment |
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