How do I increase the partition size of my ubuntu 18.04 via gparted [duplicate]












0
















This question already has an answer here:




  • How to resize partitions?

    4 answers




Here's the screenshot of my gparted window, I want to increase the size of my ubuntu partition (60.41 GB) using the unallocated size.



How do I achieve this? I have dual boot with Windows 10.



ss of gparted



If possible, it would be preferred if the solution does not involve using a live CD/Pen drive (kind of urgent and I don't have one)



Edit:
My resize option is showing disabled for ext4 even though I have unallocated just above it. Should it be below it? If yes then how do I achieve that?



ss of resize



Thank you :)










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marked as duplicate by Kulfy, user535733, ubfan1, George Udosen, Eric Carvalho Jan 9 at 16:15


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





    You can't resize the partition/drive when you are using it. So, you need a Live CD or Pen drive.

    – Kulfy
    Jan 9 at 16:21













  • Okay :( Anyways, thank you!

    – Hemakshi Sachdev
    Jan 9 at 16:22
















0
















This question already has an answer here:




  • How to resize partitions?

    4 answers




Here's the screenshot of my gparted window, I want to increase the size of my ubuntu partition (60.41 GB) using the unallocated size.



How do I achieve this? I have dual boot with Windows 10.



ss of gparted



If possible, it would be preferred if the solution does not involve using a live CD/Pen drive (kind of urgent and I don't have one)



Edit:
My resize option is showing disabled for ext4 even though I have unallocated just above it. Should it be below it? If yes then how do I achieve that?



ss of resize



Thank you :)










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by Kulfy, user535733, ubfan1, George Udosen, Eric Carvalho Jan 9 at 16:15


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





    You can't resize the partition/drive when you are using it. So, you need a Live CD or Pen drive.

    – Kulfy
    Jan 9 at 16:21













  • Okay :( Anyways, thank you!

    – Hemakshi Sachdev
    Jan 9 at 16:22














0












0








0









This question already has an answer here:




  • How to resize partitions?

    4 answers




Here's the screenshot of my gparted window, I want to increase the size of my ubuntu partition (60.41 GB) using the unallocated size.



How do I achieve this? I have dual boot with Windows 10.



ss of gparted



If possible, it would be preferred if the solution does not involve using a live CD/Pen drive (kind of urgent and I don't have one)



Edit:
My resize option is showing disabled for ext4 even though I have unallocated just above it. Should it be below it? If yes then how do I achieve that?



ss of resize



Thank you :)










share|improve this question

















This question already has an answer here:




  • How to resize partitions?

    4 answers




Here's the screenshot of my gparted window, I want to increase the size of my ubuntu partition (60.41 GB) using the unallocated size.



How do I achieve this? I have dual boot with Windows 10.



ss of gparted



If possible, it would be preferred if the solution does not involve using a live CD/Pen drive (kind of urgent and I don't have one)



Edit:
My resize option is showing disabled for ext4 even though I have unallocated just above it. Should it be below it? If yes then how do I achieve that?



ss of resize



Thank you :)





This question already has an answer here:




  • How to resize partitions?

    4 answers








boot dual-boot partitioning gparted






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 9 at 16:05







Hemakshi Sachdev

















asked Jan 9 at 16:00









Hemakshi SachdevHemakshi Sachdev

12




12




marked as duplicate by Kulfy, user535733, ubfan1, George Udosen, Eric Carvalho Jan 9 at 16:15


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 Kulfy, user535733, ubfan1, George Udosen, Eric Carvalho Jan 9 at 16:15


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





    You can't resize the partition/drive when you are using it. So, you need a Live CD or Pen drive.

    – Kulfy
    Jan 9 at 16:21













  • Okay :( Anyways, thank you!

    – Hemakshi Sachdev
    Jan 9 at 16:22














  • 1





    You can't resize the partition/drive when you are using it. So, you need a Live CD or Pen drive.

    – Kulfy
    Jan 9 at 16:21













  • Okay :( Anyways, thank you!

    – Hemakshi Sachdev
    Jan 9 at 16:22








1




1





You can't resize the partition/drive when you are using it. So, you need a Live CD or Pen drive.

– Kulfy
Jan 9 at 16:21







You can't resize the partition/drive when you are using it. So, you need a Live CD or Pen drive.

– Kulfy
Jan 9 at 16:21















Okay :( Anyways, thank you!

– Hemakshi Sachdev
Jan 9 at 16:22





Okay :( Anyways, thank you!

– Hemakshi Sachdev
Jan 9 at 16:22










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














You need to move it first, just grab the partition and drag it to the left, then resize it.






share|improve this answer
























  • No way!! That will cause complete boot failure, if that partition contains /boot

    – Holyprogrammer
    Jan 9 at 16:17











  • And that's easy to repair with a live USB. And from the look of it none of the partitions on /dev/sdb seems to have a /boot partition.

    – MatsK
    Jan 9 at 17:13













  • Please elaborate on your answer.

    – vanadium
    Jan 14 at 9:17


















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














You need to move it first, just grab the partition and drag it to the left, then resize it.






share|improve this answer
























  • No way!! That will cause complete boot failure, if that partition contains /boot

    – Holyprogrammer
    Jan 9 at 16:17











  • And that's easy to repair with a live USB. And from the look of it none of the partitions on /dev/sdb seems to have a /boot partition.

    – MatsK
    Jan 9 at 17:13













  • Please elaborate on your answer.

    – vanadium
    Jan 14 at 9:17
















0














You need to move it first, just grab the partition and drag it to the left, then resize it.






share|improve this answer
























  • No way!! That will cause complete boot failure, if that partition contains /boot

    – Holyprogrammer
    Jan 9 at 16:17











  • And that's easy to repair with a live USB. And from the look of it none of the partitions on /dev/sdb seems to have a /boot partition.

    – MatsK
    Jan 9 at 17:13













  • Please elaborate on your answer.

    – vanadium
    Jan 14 at 9:17














0












0








0







You need to move it first, just grab the partition and drag it to the left, then resize it.






share|improve this answer













You need to move it first, just grab the partition and drag it to the left, then resize it.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 9 at 16:14









MatsKMatsK

410210




410210













  • No way!! That will cause complete boot failure, if that partition contains /boot

    – Holyprogrammer
    Jan 9 at 16:17











  • And that's easy to repair with a live USB. And from the look of it none of the partitions on /dev/sdb seems to have a /boot partition.

    – MatsK
    Jan 9 at 17:13













  • Please elaborate on your answer.

    – vanadium
    Jan 14 at 9:17



















  • No way!! That will cause complete boot failure, if that partition contains /boot

    – Holyprogrammer
    Jan 9 at 16:17











  • And that's easy to repair with a live USB. And from the look of it none of the partitions on /dev/sdb seems to have a /boot partition.

    – MatsK
    Jan 9 at 17:13













  • Please elaborate on your answer.

    – vanadium
    Jan 14 at 9:17

















No way!! That will cause complete boot failure, if that partition contains /boot

– Holyprogrammer
Jan 9 at 16:17





No way!! That will cause complete boot failure, if that partition contains /boot

– Holyprogrammer
Jan 9 at 16:17













And that's easy to repair with a live USB. And from the look of it none of the partitions on /dev/sdb seems to have a /boot partition.

– MatsK
Jan 9 at 17:13







And that's easy to repair with a live USB. And from the look of it none of the partitions on /dev/sdb seems to have a /boot partition.

– MatsK
Jan 9 at 17:13















Please elaborate on your answer.

– vanadium
Jan 14 at 9:17





Please elaborate on your answer.

– vanadium
Jan 14 at 9:17



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