It may be too much to ask but here it goes:

I have temporarily installed LMDE6 on an HDD where I had a bit of free space, worked with it, experienced Steam with Proton and now I am convinced: I want to move to Linux from Windows for good.

Have another disk, an SSD in which most of the space is taken up by the Windows C: partition. Would like to move Linux there after shrinking the Windows partition a bit more than what it currently occupies now.

I have tried to do this with Paragon on Windows, but after restarting no change can be seen, despite no error being presented. Tried from Linux with GParted but all attempts end up with an error when running ntfsresize.

So

  1. What do I use to do this and how do I do it safely? 2.How do I move the content of my current Linux partition (less than 50 GBs) to that disk keeping the bootloader and everything else working? And what filesystem is best to use?

Thank you in advance for your help!

  • yaroto98
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    12 hours ago

    This may be old advice, but I’ve always heard never resize down. It can work if you’re lucky and there’s no data in the space you’re shrinking, but if there is data there, it’ll often fail.

    If the hdd is the same size or bigger than your ssd, I’d recommend cloning the ssd to the hdd. This will wipe your hdd, but should keep windows fine. Then do a clean install of linux on the ssd.