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KDE Partition Manager is also available as a bootable Live CD. It allows you to easily create, copy, move, delete, resize your hard disk without losing data, backup and restore partitions. KDE Partition Manager is a Linux utility program created to help you manage the disk devices, such as partitions and file systems on your computer. MakersCorner.KDE Partition Manager for Linux – The Overview What is the KDE Partition Manager? I launched it and was given the dialog for root user permissions. Using the handy Plasma menu with the search feature, I started typing “Partition” and it popped up. I have a great respect and love for Gparted at this point, I am hoping that I am not losing any features by using KDE Partition Manager.
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libkpmcore7 – KDE Partition Manager core library.kpmcore – KDE Partition Manager core library.Or navigate here for the Direct Install LinkĪs expected, it installed very little, a total of 4 new packages: That’s good news as I am hoping it wouldn’t re-implement anything and just use existing tools. It goes on to say that it makes use of external programs to get its job done, so you might have to install additional software (preferably packages from your distribution) to make use of all features and get full support for all file systems. I am guessing you can also do Ext4, BTRFS and others. These file systems include ext2 ext3, reiserfs, NTFS, FAT32 and more. It is also described as being software that allows you to manage your disks, partitions and file systems that allows you to create, resize, delete, copy, backup and restore partitions with a large number of supported file systems. So I guess we will see if this holds true. I noticed on the openSUSE Software Site, its short description is that you can Easily manage disks, partitions and file systems on your KDE Desktop. Since this isn’t installed by default with the Plasma Desktop, arguably it should be, here is how you o about it. I should note, they both Gparted and KDE Partition Manager use the same icon. In this off-hand search, I stumbled upon PartitionManger which is in official openSUSE Tumbleweed and Leap Repositories. This is not a light on GTK based applications, I just find that they don’t tend to look as nice and clean as Qt apps. Specifically one that is Qt based instead. I have become quite the fan of Gparted over the years of my Linux life and I started wondering if there were other partition management options out there.
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