Solved: decided to avoid the funkyness this would invoke and just bought another drive. all good now👍

About a year back, I moved my internal 8tb and 4tb HDDs from my main Windows machine to my old PC-turned-Linux-server. They hold a bunch of bulk data like Youtube channel archives and torrents that are open to download.

I would like to do an in-place ext4 conversion, if possible. Currently I’ve just started shuffling data off to an SSD and the plan was to slowly shrink the NTFS partitions and turn the new space into ext4, 500gb at a time (size of the intermediary SSD), but it is taking an unbearably long time. Shrinking the 4tb partition in gparted has been running for 13 hours, with an estimated 22 hours remaining! And I’ll have to do it 7 more times for the 4tb, and 16 times for the 8tb!!

Is there a better way to do this?

  • ares35@kbin.social
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    6 months ago

    hard drives are going to be slow af copying data to itself, or moving data to a different partition on it.

    then you’re also adding partition size manipulation to the mix, which will also be slow af when data has to be moved off the ‘end’ of partitions to ‘make room’ to enlarge or create another with a different fs.

    your best option is to get another drive, even if it’s also a hard drive instead of ssd. use that to move (copy, really, to preserve the original as a backup for the time being) all the data to that you want to preserve.

    • pe1uca@lemmy.pe1uca.dev
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      6 months ago

      Found that also myself trying to do the same thing haha. I did the same process as OP, gparted took 2.5 hours in my 1TB HDD to create a new partition, then copying the data from old to new partition was painfully slow, so I went to copy it to another dive and into the new partition.
      Afterwards I deleted the old partition and grew the new one, which took a bit more than 1.5 hours.

      If I had the space I would have copied all the data out of the drive, formatted it and then copied back into. It would have been quicker.

  • Papamousse@beehaw.org
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    6 months ago

    Buy another 8 or 4TB, format it as ext4, copy everything from the ntfs HD to ext4 HD, swap drive, that’s it. Keep the old HD to do some backup, put it in a usb3 encolusre.

  • just another dev@lemmy.my-box.dev
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    6 months ago

    Since you really should be creating a backup of the data before doing such a conversion in the first place, the best (not necessarily the fastest, but definitely the safest) way would be to copy the data to another medium, and copy it back when the space has been formatted.

  • gerdesj@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    Files are files and filesystems are filesystems. You keep your files on filesystems.

    NTFS and ext4 are non convertible - you cannot turn one into the other directly, in place. However you can take files from one and put them on another.

    Yes, moving TBs does take time, sorry it is unbearable.

  • catloaf@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    It’ll be much faster the next time. It has to make sure all the data is out of the space to be freed. Assuming it moves it as close to the start of the partition as it can (and you’re shrinking it from the end) then it’ll be faster.

    If you’re shrinking it from the start, yeah, it’s going to take forever because it will always have to move a lot of data.

  • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    you can’t get there from here.

    you can convert to btrfs, but no matter what anyone says, there lie dragons.

    if you end up doing big bulk reads and writes to and from your disks, keep them cool. if that means limiting bitrates with the rsync command or just plugging them up to a 802.11g laptop and copying from there to your target then that’s fine. if it means making a funnel to direct a box fan’s worth of cfm onto your drives then that’s fine.

  • SteveTech@programming.dev
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    6 months ago

    I don’t know anything that can do an in-place ext4 conversation, but there’s ntfs2btrfs which is already in the Debian repos if you’re okay with BTRFS.

    Of course, backup anything important, ntfs2btrfs should create a backup snapshot if you need to revert back to NTFS, but I wouldn’t count on it.

    • helpimnotdrowning@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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      6 months ago

      What’s the advantage in btrfs over ext4? I’ve kept hearing about it since I started with Linux but the only advantage I can see with it is the snapshot rollback feature, which while useful looking, I don’t think would be something I would use

      • downhomechunk@midwest.social
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        6 months ago

        If you are still dual booting, btrfs has a very good windows driver. Btrfs is newer and only recently started becoming the default on a couple mainline OSes. Ext4 has been around forever and is assumed to be much more stable.

        Fwiw, I’ve been using btrfs for the last 18 months or so without any issue. I don’t use any of the tools. There’s no obvious or immediate performance difference like there was in the old days. We’re all on SSDs now and they’re fast no matter what.

      • AProfessional@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        It actually checks for corruption, can do raid to fix corruption, is CoW so less likely to corrupt. And it can do transparent compression.

  • kelargo@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Use rsync -avs to move files from NTFS to your new filesystem. XFS is pretty good for lots of files.

  • d3Xt3r@lemmy.nzM
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    6 months ago

    Why not just leave them as NTFS for now? The new in-kernel NTFS3 driver is actually pretty decent (since kernel 6.2), and shouldn’t pose any issues if you’re just using it as a bulk data store.

    Eventually when you replace the disks, you can can format your new disks as ext4 (or even better, use btrfs or bcachefs).

  • Omega_Jimes
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    6 months ago

    If it is not sensitive data, and you’re okay being morally objectionable, you can buy a large hard drive from some place with a good return policy, transfer your data to it, format/repartition your drive, transfer everything back and return the hdd for a 15% stocking fee.