Shrink a partition on Windows – the right way
Problem: I have just received a computer, pre-installed with Windows. It is equipped with a 1TB disk, partitioned as a whole 😐 (Yes, that’s how HP partition their disk for you). I don’t have time to reinstall the whole thing; and I need to split the disk in two: The operating system, and the rest is for storage.
When I tried to shrink the disk in Windows Disk Management, I can only shrink it for about 500GB, when I used Pirisoft’s Defraggler to view disk content, it’s the files from winsxs directory that were placed at the end of the disk.
This may be some form of “optimization” Microsoft randomized into Windows. Be it or not, my first reaction was to run Windows’s Defrag utility, it reported my disk is 0% fragmented and won’t proceed, the files are still there (I guess they are just too small to be fragmented). Defraggler did worse, it started moving other small files into the area, while what I wanted is moving things OUT of there.
Searching the web proved futile, everyone says there’s no other way than using some obscure utility on a boot disk (my operating system is 64 bit, mind you, and a 32 bit defragger doesn’t sound fine to me) or reinstall the whole thing.
Well, after one day of searching, I finally found MyDefrag , it is sure not pretty, but it really do what it is supposed to do: move your files where you want them to be, and it ran fine on my system. Basically what I did was download MyDefrag, select “cosolidate free space” and click run. Voilà! Things started moving and in 10 minutes, my disk is ready to shrink (this time, Windows allowed me to shrink an additional 450GB). One thing to note though: My Defrag display the disk map upside down, so the end of you disk is at the top of the screen and vice versa.