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Recovering unallocated space of a USB

flash drive.
Today I played with the latest SUSE Linux Live. I had not have a
DVD drive and used USB flash drive instead. I wanted to reformat
my flash drive, but suddenly found it that it had not been possible.
The most of the disk space had been unallocated, and my Windows
8 did not allow me to use it.

Unfortunately Windows does not support Fdisk anymore. But there


is another good command line tool to solve this problem. The tool’s
name is DiskPart. I would say it is the next generation of Fdisk tool.
DiskPart provides you information about your partitions and
volumes, allows you to delete and create partitions, extend NTFS
volumes, etc.

Let’s remove unallocated space. First of all run Windows command


line and type diskpart in the command prompt. Windows will ask
you for Administrator permissions to run the tool. Then run list
disk command to find your USB flash disk’s number. It should be
the same as disk’s number in Computer Management tool. It was 1
in my case. Next you should chose the disk to work with.
Type select disk <disk number> command, e.g. select disk 1.
The next step is to clean all volumes and partitions on the disk.
Use clean command to do that. The last step is to create a primary
partition. You can do that using create partition
primary command. That’s all. You should be able to format your
flash disk now.

This is how I removed unallocated space on my machine:


Microsoft DiskPart version 6.2.9200

Copyright (C) 1999-2012 Microsoft Corporation.


On computer: COMPUTER

DISKPART> list disk

Disk ### Status Size Free Dyn Gpt


-------- ------------- ------- ------- --- ---
Disk 0 Online 298 GB 0 B
Disk 1 Online 7509 MB 6619 MB

DISKPART> select disk 1

Disk 1 is now the selected disk.

DISKPART> clean

DiskPart succeeded in cleaning the disk.

DISKPART> create partition primary

DiskPart succeeded in creating the specified partition.

DISKPART> exit

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