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Changing a disc that has several partitions (NTFS or EXT4) from MBR to GPT format

Changing a disc that has several partitions (NTFS or EXT4) from MBR to GPT format

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xFqtal_
Senior Member
670
10-05-2016, 08:51 AM
#11
I haven’t spent much time exploring this, but I considered it recently. Would it be possible to create a GPT disk on the NVME storage, copy only the partitions there, update GRUB (or run a live boot repair and let it fix itself), and then everything work? If it sounds so easy, I might regret trying such a method. My challenge could be the fact that I have more than four partitions on an MBR disk—three for Ubuntu (OS, data, swap) and Windows, plus a leftover recovery partition for Windows. I suspect this complexity is why GPT fails, as many factors are involved. It might just be a matter of luck with gdisk too. Clearly, with GPT you wouldn’t need the three Ubuntu partitions in the container, which would make things much simpler.
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xFqtal_
10-05-2016, 08:51 AM #11

I haven’t spent much time exploring this, but I considered it recently. Would it be possible to create a GPT disk on the NVME storage, copy only the partitions there, update GRUB (or run a live boot repair and let it fix itself), and then everything work? If it sounds so easy, I might regret trying such a method. My challenge could be the fact that I have more than four partitions on an MBR disk—three for Ubuntu (OS, data, swap) and Windows, plus a leftover recovery partition for Windows. I suspect this complexity is why GPT fails, as many factors are involved. It might just be a matter of luck with gdisk too. Clearly, with GPT you wouldn’t need the three Ubuntu partitions in the container, which would make things much simpler.

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babcraft
Member
71
10-05-2016, 04:07 PM
#12
I spent some time relaxing and figured things out. I made a disk GPT, transferred partitions to it, set up an efi boot partition, and added some space at the start of the drive. After that, I managed to boot GRUB and got Xubuntu running. Windows isn’t showing up for update-grub or os-prober, likely because it’s an old Windows 7 installation still in BIOS mode. I’m okay copying my data over and starting a fresh Windows 10 install there, then fixing GRUB again. I plan to clone this onto the NVME drive and test if it boots. Then I’ll move any needed files from the old Windows partition and do a Windows 10 install on the laptop so it picks up the product key correctly during setup. Best of luck!
B
babcraft
10-05-2016, 04:07 PM #12

I spent some time relaxing and figured things out. I made a disk GPT, transferred partitions to it, set up an efi boot partition, and added some space at the start of the drive. After that, I managed to boot GRUB and got Xubuntu running. Windows isn’t showing up for update-grub or os-prober, likely because it’s an old Windows 7 installation still in BIOS mode. I’m okay copying my data over and starting a fresh Windows 10 install there, then fixing GRUB again. I plan to clone this onto the NVME drive and test if it boots. Then I’ll move any needed files from the old Windows partition and do a Windows 10 install on the laptop so it picks up the product key correctly during setup. Best of luck!

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