Translation for those who do not speak Spanish:

You can check if a process called "ntfsresize" exists by executing the
shell command

ps xa

if it does you can kill the process with the shell command:

sudo killall ntfsresize

then test again to check of ntfsresize has stopped.

After that you should be able to format the unit.




On 18 nov, 13:21, Popa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Puedes probar
>
> ps xa
>
> Si el proceso ntfsresize existe entonces ejecuta
>
> sudo killall ntfsresize
>
> Prueba nuevamente si el ntfsresize no se ha cerrado
>
> Eventualmente te habilitará el particionamiento y formateo de las
> unidades
>
> On 18 nov, 09:03, mahjongg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > No the defragmenter is a tool on the Windows system, you use it to
> > compact the information on the NTFS system, and to remove errors in
> > the NTFS filing system.
>
> > On 18 nov, 05:47, peter collingwood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Thanks. Tried all that. The partition editor wont do anything to the 
> > > disc. Can't delete, resize, rename, re-nothing the exiting partition. I'm 
> > > becoming more and more convinced that the drive is bad. I have a new 
> > > replacement on order. That should be here in a couple of days. If I still 
> > > have no luck with that one then I don't know. By the way in the "Clean 
> > > Install" thread mention was made of a defragmenter. Is that on the gOS 
> > > disc as well?
>
> > > - Peter.
>
> > > --- On Mon, 11/17/08, mahjongg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > From: mahjongg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > > Subject: Re: Drive partitioning in gOS
> > > To: "gOS Linux" <[email protected]>
> > > Date: Monday, November 17, 2008, 7:49 AM
>
> > > Why so difficult, just let the installer do the work, and choose
> > > "assisted, use whole disk", and the installer will remove your XP
> > > partition, and make the two new partitions that gOS needs. gOS
> > > normally uses one "ext3" partition for Linux, and one
> > > "swap" partition
> > > for the virtual memory swapfile.
>
> > > NTFS and FAT formats are windows formats, not internally used by gOS
> > > (except when needed to access external drives and memory sticks etc
> > > formatted with these standards).
>
> > > If you cannot install using the default assisted installer,  one
> > > reason may be that gOS sees a "corrupted" NTFS Windows XP partition,
> > > and hangs on that.
>
> > > The best solution is to use gParted (the partition editor on the Live
> > > CD) to remove all partitions on the Hard-disk, and then to just run
> > > the installer on the empty hard-disk.
>
> > > On 17 nov, 14:42, peter collingwood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> About 3 
> > > Gig's. But I intend to wipe out the XP partition and use the
>
> > > whole 6 Gig's for gOS.
>
> > > > - Peter.
>
> > > > --- On Sun, 11/16/08, wirechief <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > From: wirechief <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > > > Subject: Re: Drive partitioning in gOS
> > > > To: [email protected]
> > > > Date: Sunday, November 16, 2008, 6:20 PM
>
> > > > There are lots of  "howto's"  for partitioning and
>
> > > installing Linux on google, you should
>
> > > > use ext3 and you probably need to make a /  then a small swap partition
> > > of about 512mb
> > > > / = root, how much free space do you have ?
>
> > > > On Sun, Nov 16, 2008 at 9:05 PM, Peter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > Ok. So I'm trying to get this thing loaded on an old Toshiba A65
>
> > > > Satellite laptop with 512MB of ram and a 6 Gig HDD.
>
> > > > I used to have XP on this box until the thing refused to book being
>
> > > > stuck in a perpetual bluescreen loop on startup. I cannot get past the
>
> > > > partitions formatting in the install. The partition organizer sees the
>
> > > > complete drive with the XP section and the free space. I'm trying to
>
> > > > go with the default suggestions but it refuses to format. Sits at 5%
>
> > > > for about 20 mintues and then fails. What is the correct file system
>
> > > > to use for this thing? There are about ten different options including
>
> > > > Fat16, 32, NTFS etc. Which is the correct one for gOS? How do you
>
> > > > create a root for it. When I try to do it maually it keeps telling me
>
> > > > I need to set up a root partition but the partition manager does not
>
> > > > seem to allow this to be done. What am I doing wrong here?
>
> > > > - Peter.
>
> > > > --
> > > > Reach out and share life, care for others,
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