this post was submitted on 19 Oct 2023
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A moment ago I unmounted my 1TB HDD with 400GB of content and I partition it into two different partitions, obviously keeping the space that was already occupied. I did because I don't care if the content get corrupted, but after I did it everything is still working perfectly, when I thought everything would be corrupted.

I am possibly a complete ignorant on this subject, but due to the nature of the HDD and how it writes and reads data I expected it to corrupt everything, why didn't it happen? On an SSD on the other hand I would not consider that possible because it is not even a mechanical part where the information is stored.

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[–] Xirup@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I’m using ext4 and the contents of the HDD are basically virtual machines, and I was able to access most of them (who use dynamic virtual hard drives) and they seem to work without problem, so I assumed that nothing got corrupted.

Actually I was surprised because a long ago I tried to do the same with BFTRS and all my data get corrupted that time.

And it’s interesting, thanks for the info. I didn’t know that it worked like that.