So, I've had this 1Tb HDD lying around unused, so I had the bright idea of shoving it in place of my Dell Latitude E6410's original 640Gb HDD, use that in place of the old 60Gb HDD on my T60 (a mere 60Gbs just weren't enough to accommodate my Google Drive - running on Linux with InSync - and Mega cloud storage), and put my latest W10 Pro system image on the 1Tb in the E6410.All well and good so far - except when I checked the partitions after I reinstalled the system image from the original 640Gb, this is what I got. You need to use a third party partition management software to move the Recovery partition. Something like Partition Wizard would handle that fine and some have bootable media you can use. I do not know what might be available in your part of the world.After you move the partition you can extend C at the same time or use Disk Management. But don't try to move the partition in front of C since that would get it out of order and probably mess up your boot.If you are going to Windows 10, you can install over the earlier OS and later do a clean install.
Hi Tesssa, welcome to the forums. The op is referring to the recovery partition, which does lie behind the primary, and not the all important boot partition, at the front (System reserved)sjanzeir. First, welcome to you, also.You can delete the partition manually, if you do not feel you will need to recover. You can, of course, set up the recovery again in Windows 10. With an upgrade, this partition is also used in the process of retuning to your earlier Windows os.
Under you circumstances, I think we can assume that you have made a clean install, anyway??Please, before you follow this, is that is what you ant to do, make a reliable backup of the hard disk!!To delete it, try this:1.Right click the start icon and select the Command prompt(Admin).2.Type Diskpart in the command prompt - Enter.3. Type rescan at the prompt. enter - This operation will take a few seconds.4.
Type list disk and press Enter5.Select the disk, where the partition is sitting - in your case, probably 0, by typing Select disk 06. Type list partitions and enter.7.Carefully select the partition that you wish to delete, by typing select partition x (substitute x)8. Type delete partition override and enter. In disk management, you can only extend partition using the unallocated space next to its right side. So even if you shrink D: drive, the option to extend C: drive is still grayed out. You have to delete a contiguous partition, before you can merge partitions in Disk Management. Therefore, My suggestion is to use a third party software, AOMEI Partition Assistant, both the standard (free) or the Professional(paid) version will do.
You can use it to either move the unallocated space and extend partition with disk Management or directly.Even though you will not lose the data in the process, be sure to backup any data on the disk that you cannot lose first just to be safe in case something happens. Say a power outage while in the middle of merging partitions. Hi, I followed the instructions here, and deleted the recovery partition that was in the way.I still have a recovery partition at the very end of the disk. (Probably due to reinstalling Windows.)Question is: am I now good to go, or do I have to repair/recreate my recovery partition?I think I have to recreate it, because the recovery options in Windows are not finding my recovery data.Actually, I still have the missing recovery partition in a system image. I suppose I could restore it onto the recovery partition at the end of the disk? Not sure if the sizes match.
Hi, I followed the instructions here, and deleted the recovery partition that was in the way.I still have a recovery partition at the very end of the disk. (Probably due to reinstalling Windows.)Question is: am I now good to go, or do I have to repair/recreate my recovery partition?I think I have to recreate it, because the recovery options in Windows are not finding my recovery data.Actually, I still have the missing recovery partition in a system image. I suppose I could restore it onto the recovery partition at the end of the disk? Not sure if the sizes match.
Hi Everyone, my name is Suganya and I am from the Windows Devices and Deployment Team. I would like to discuss one of the common issues customers face today; “Customizing the recovery partition after upgrading from Windows 8.1 to Windows 10”. What is Windows RE and why is it used?The Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE) is a recovery environment that can repair common causes of unbootable operating systems. Windows RE is based on Windows Preinstallation Environment (Windows PE), and can be customized with additional drivers, languages, Windows PE Optional Components, and other troubleshooting and diagnostic tools. By default, Windows RE is preloaded into the Windows 8.1 and Windows Server 2012 R2 installations. (For more information please refer to the following article:Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE) OverviewConsider the following scenario: You are planning an upgrade from Windows 8.1 to Windows 10.
Before upgrading the OS, you see the following partitions in the diskpart:. System reserved partition (350 MB).Memory Management, Performance, Printing, Terminal Server.Debugging, Hangs, Tools.DFSR, Certificates, Group Policy.Espanol, Portugues.SMS MOM.Scalable Networking, OCS, Communications Server.Windows Essential Business Server.Microsoft Application Virtualization, SoftGrid, Softricity.DPM related issues.BDD Team.Vista Team Blog.Microsoft GTSC Bucharest / Covering topics such as: Windows Server, Failover Clustering, Performance, Printing, Core OS, AD, Deployment, WSUS, SCOM/SCCMProduct Team Blogs. I use to be able to add a custom bootkey to the bootmgr in the BCD store, but when I configure the BCD on a Windows 10 machine and press the custom bootkey up rebooting the machine – it freezes. Is that ability removed from the bcedit.exe and reagent.exe? The only ways I read that allow you boot to the recovery environment besides the default methods are as follows:1. Reagentc.exe /boottore2.
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Edit the bootmenupolicy legacy in the BCD store, so you can press F8 and it will list the recovery environmentIs there any other way of invoking the recovery environment by pressing a custom bootkey or programmatically?
Hi all - just upgraded my PC by cloning my old 160GB SATA HDD to a new 250GB SATA SSD drive.All is fine and I can boot into Windows and all works perfectly (AND SO MUCH FASTER!!!)My issue is this. Windows has a Recovery Partition. I want to expand the OS partition of my drive to use the new space my larger 250GB drive entails, but the Recovery Partition is smack dab in the middle of the new 250GB SSD now because of the clone (it was at the end of the drive on the 160GB HDD).If I use a program like GParted or another parition manager to MOVE the Recovery Partition to the end of the drive so I can use the new space, is that going to mess up WIndows and will the Recovery partition still work as it always had, despite the move?Thanks in advance!:). Multiple Large Recovery PartitionsI am going through and cleaning out my hard drives and organizing them and when I cloned my boot drive I noticed that there are 4 partitions. 462 MB System Reserve (G, 445.31 GB Sandisk Ultra II (C, 486 MB Recovery Partition, and 912 MB Recovery Partition.I know I don't need all of those recovery partitions, and they really don't hurt anything but when I clone the drive of course they are cloned as well and then there ends up being 5+ partitions on the drive im cloning to which defeats the purpose of organizing.How can I tell which partition I can remove and which one is the actual recovery partition? Im running Win10 64-bit.Post moved by the moderator to the appropriate forum category.
Hi Everyone, my name is Suganya and I am from the Windows Devices and Deployment Team. I would like to discuss one of the common issues customers face today; “Customizing the recovery partition after upgrading from Windows 8.1 to Windows 10”. What is Windows RE and why is it used?The Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE) is a recovery environment that can repair common causes of unbootable operating systems. Windows RE is based on Windows Preinstallation Environment (Windows PE), and can be customized with additional drivers, languages, Windows PE Optional Components, and other troubleshooting and diagnostic tools. By default, Windows RE is preloaded into the Windows 8.1 and Windows Server 2012 R2 installations. (For more information please refer to the following article:Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE) OverviewConsider the following scenario: You are planning an upgrade from Windows 8.1 to Windows 10. Before upgrading the OS, you see the following partitions in the diskpart:.
System reserved partition (350 MB).Memory Management, Performance, Printing, Terminal Server.Debugging, Hangs, Tools.DFSR, Certificates, Group Policy.Espanol, Portugues.SMS MOM.Scalable Networking, OCS, Communications Server.Windows Essential Business Server.Microsoft Application Virtualization, SoftGrid, Softricity.DPM related issues.BDD Team.Vista Team Blog.Microsoft GTSC Bucharest / Covering topics such as: Windows Server, Failover Clustering, Performance, Printing, Core OS, AD, Deployment, WSUS, SCOM/SCCMProduct Team Blogs. I use to be able to add a custom bootkey to the bootmgr in the BCD store, but when I configure the BCD on a Windows 10 machine and press the custom bootkey up rebooting the machine – it freezes.
How To Move A Recovery Partition Windows 10
Move Partition In Windows 10
Is that ability removed from the bcedit.exe and reagent.exe? Emv sdk software download. The only ways I read that allow you boot to the recovery environment besides the default methods are as follows:1. Reagentc.exe /boottore2. Edit the bootmenupolicy legacy in the BCD store, so you can press F8 and it will list the recovery environmentIs there any other way of invoking the recovery environment by pressing a custom bootkey or programmatically?