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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Shrink my partition to new disk Post 302461160 by amol28kulkarni on Friday 8th of October 2010 04:54:47 PM
Old 10-08-2010
Shrink my partition to new disk

I want to backup my partitions by shrinking it my issue is like
I want to create a new disk copy from only the used blocks I my current image.
How would I redirect the output of resize2fs to new disk and dd the current
partition so that I can boot my new image without issues and also without touching my current image and copying over of only the required data.

I understand that I can copy the entire disk and then resize the cloned disk but this seems inefficient as not all my disk is being used.
I dont want to hinder the current working disk manipulations on this should be avoided as I dont have any other backup.

So suppose I have a 2TB disk of which only 100GB is being used I need only these 100GB in the new disk. Is there any way of copying the used blocks in the existing filesystem to the new filesystem ?

Any pointer or clear ideas would be really useful. I appreciate this if I get some list of commands or steps and doing this without any software
 

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MBRLABEL(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					       MBRLABEL(8)

NAME
mbrlabel -- update disk label from MBR label(s) SYNOPSIS
mbrlabel [-fqrw] [-s sector] device DESCRIPTION
mbrlabel is used to update a NetBSD disk label from the Master Boot Record (MBR) label(s) found on disks that were previously used on DOS/Windows systems (or other MBR using systems). mbrlabel scans the MBR contained in the very first block of the disk (or the block specified through the -s flag), then walks through every extended partition found and generates additional partition entries for the disk from the MBRs found in those extended partitions. Each MBR partition which does not have an equivalent partition in the disk label (equivalent in having the same size and offset) is added to the first free partition slot in the disk label. A free partition slot is defined as one with an fstype of 'unused' and a size of zero ('0'). If there are not enough free slots in the disk label, a warning will be issued. The raw partition (typically partition c, but d on i386 and some other platforms) is left alone during this process. By default, the proposed changed disk label will be displayed and no disk label update will occur. Available options: -f Force an update, even if there has been no change. -q Performs operations in a quiet fashion. -r In conjunction with -w, also update the on-disk label. -s sector Specifies the logical sector number that has to be read from the disk in order to find the MBR. Useful if the disk has remapping drivers on it and the MBR is located in a non-standard place. Defaults to 0. -w Update the in-core label if it has been changed. See also -r. SEE ALSO
disklabel(8), dkctl(8), fdisk(8), mbr(8) HISTORY
The mbrlabel command appeared in NetBSD 1.4. BSD
April 5, 2010 BSD
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