Acronis disk director suite 9.0 ユーザーズマニュアル
Beginning The Work
Copyright © Acronis, Inc., 2000–2005
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2.3
Calling Partition Operations
All partition operations in both modes are called and executed similarly.
2.3.1
Calling the main operations
Any partition operation can be launched:
• By selecting it from the Disk submenu
• From customizable toolbars
• From the partition context menu (both in the main window and the graphical
• From customizable toolbars
• From the partition context menu (both in the main window and the graphical
panel)
• From Operations and Advanced sidebar lists
Note that the list of available
operations in the Disk
submenu and the Operations
sidebar list depends on the selected partition type. This holds true for unallocated
space as well.
space as well.
2.3.2 Advanced
operations
Advanced hard disk partition operations are:
• Convert — convert the FAT16 partition file system to FAT32, Ext2 to Ext3, and
vice versa
• Hide/Unhide — hide/unhide a partition
• Set Active — set an active partition
• Resize Root — resize FAT16 partition root
• Change Bytes per INODE — resize INODE table (Linux Ext2/Ext3)
• Change Cluster Size — change FAT16/FAT32 partition cluster size
• Change Type — change partition type
• Recover - recovering deleted or damaged partitions (see Chapter 5 «Working
• Set Active — set an active partition
• Resize Root — resize FAT16 partition root
• Change Bytes per INODE — resize INODE table (Linux Ext2/Ext3)
• Change Cluster Size — change FAT16/FAT32 partition cluster size
• Change Type — change partition type
• Recover - recovering deleted or damaged partitions (see Chapter 5 «Working
• Edit - editing hard disk data (see Chapter 6 «Working with Acronis Disk Editor»).
Advanced partition operations are called from the Advanced sidebar list, the same
partition context menu item or toolbar button.
partition context menu item or toolbar button.
Note that the additional operations list of the partition context menu or toolbar
depends on the selection of a partition type. For example, the FAT16 partition menu
depends on the selection of a partition type. For example, the FAT16 partition menu
contains Advanced Resize Root; this is absent in the FAT32 partition menu. The
Linux Ext2/Ext3 partition context menu contains Advanced Change Bytes per
INODE, which is not found on the FAT menus.
Linux Ext2/Ext3 partition context menu contains Advanced Change Bytes per
INODE, which is not found on the FAT menus.