4. Disk Partitioning

Lesson Content

Let’s do some practical stuff with filesytems by working through the process on a USB drive. If you don’t have one, no worries, you can still follow along these next couple of lessons.

First we’ll need to partition our disk. There are many tools available to do this:

  • fdisk - basic command-line partitioning tool, it does not support GPT
  • parted - this is a command line tool that supports both MBR and GPT partitioning
  • gparted - this is the GUI version of parted
  • gdisk - fdisk, but it does not support MBR only GPT

Let’s use parted to do our partitioning. Let’s say I connect the USB device and we see the device name is /dev/sdb2.

Launch parted

$ sudo parted

You’ll be entered in the parted tool, here you can run commands to partition your device.

Select the device

select /dev/sdb2

To select the device you’ll be working with, select it by its device name.

View current partition table

(parted) print                                                            
Model: Seagate (scsi)
Disk /dev/sda: 21.5GB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
Partition Table: msdos

Number  Start   End     Size    Type      File system     Flags
 1      1049kB  6860MB  6859MB  primary   ext4            boot
 2      6861MB  21.5GB  14.6GB  extended
 5      6861MB  7380MB  519MB   logical   linux-swap(v1)
 6      7381MB  21.5GB  14.1GB  logical   xfs

Here you will see the available partitions on the device. The start and end points are where the partitions take up space on the hard drive, you’ll want to find a good start and end location for your partitions.

Partition the device

mkpart primary 123 4567

Now just choose a start and end point and make the partition, you’ll need to specify the type of partition depending on what table you used.

Resize a partition

You can also resize a partition if you don’t have any space.

resize 2 1245 3456

Select the partition number and then the start and end points of where you want to resize it to.

Parted is a very powerful tool and you should be careful when partitioning your disks.

Exercise

Partition a USB drive with half of the drive as ext4 and the other half as free space.

Quiz Question

# What is the parted command to make a partition? > parted is a disk partitioning and partition resizing program. It allows you to create, destroy, resize, move and copy ext2, ext3, linux-swap, FAT, FAT32, and reiserfs partitions. It can create, resize and move Macintosh HFS partitions, as well as detect jfs, ntfs, ufs, and xfs partitions. 1. [ ] parted 2. [ ] fstab 3. [x] mkpart