Anyone tried and succeeded? Not too awful plodding through the resizing? Tips to avoid destroying a partition and having to reinstall the os?

  • Thurstylark@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    Waow. MS can’t decide if their users should have control of their hardware or not.

    Your linux bootloader and efi config? That belongs to Windows, and it will make changes as much as it wants. A recovery partition that has no usefulness outside their own ecosystem? Yeah, they know it’s fucked, and they fucked it, but it’s your computer, you fix it!

    • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 years ago

      Not dickriding microsoft here, but they have provided all the tools to fix this. They just can’t make them happen automatically on effected machines because they broke something particularly complicated.

      You need to have enough space to resolve the issue (which was caused by not having enough space in the recovery partition in the first place). You need to adjust the size of the parition (traditionally a risky operation, especially through Windows). You then need to download a specific update while skipping another, install, and reboot.

      They have provided scripts for backing up the recovery partition, expanding it, and restoring the contents from backup if expanding fucks the contents. They have provided a script to download and install the specific update to fix the problem once you have enough space in that paritition. They did not automate restarting the computer (piss easy to automate), or to hide the problematic update (easy through UI, probably a pain to script).

      • kungen@feddit.nu
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        2 years ago

        But the partition is Microsoft’s own, basically no one has ever touched it themselves. So why can’t they do some housecleaning to make enough space? At the very least, they could fix the error messages to be more descriptive on how to fix it.

        The tin-foil in me says it’s just a tactic to get people to switch to Windows 11. “Oh, I have errors with my updates? I should really try upgrading and see if that fixes it, I don’t want any hackers to steal my megabytes…”

  • N3Cr0@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    A recovery environment is overrated under Windows. Just backup your files and reinstall from scratch.

    • Crackhappy@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I’ve been using windows since windows 3. The number of times I’ve used the “recovery” feature is exactly zero.

      Edit: Corrected by another user below. I have used it a couple times for update rollbacks, I just haven’t used it for a full recovery. When I’ve run into serious issues I just reload it from scratch, as I keep data and OS on completely separate drives.

      • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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        2 years ago

        The number of times I’ve used the “recovery” feature is exactly zero.

        The RE Partition is for more than Recovery. If you’ve ever uninstalled an update then you’ve used the RE Partition.