Once your data is deleted, there is a window of opportunity for recovery. Keeping a backup allows for easy recovery if needed. If something goes wrong during the process, you could end up losing an entire partition’s worth of data. While making a backup is important when performing any action with your data, it’s especially important if you’re making adjustments to your partition structure. □ Backup data before editing partition structure.FAT/FAT32/exFAT, NTFS, HFS & HFS+, APFS, EXT3/EXT4 and any RAW diskīeFS, CramFS, FAT12/16/32, FATX, exFAT, HFS, HFS+, HFSX, JFS, btrfs, ext2/3/4, GFS2, LUKS encrypted partition, Linux RAID md 0.9/1.0/1.1/1.2, RAID 1/4/5/6, Linux Swap, LVM, LVM2, NSS, NTFS, ReiserFS 3.5, 3.6 and 4, Sun Solaris i386 disklabel, UFS, UFS2, XFS, SGI's Journaled File System, Wii WBFS, Sun ZFSįAT, ReFS, UFS, HFS, NTFS, ReiserFS, APFS(reader mode), RomFS(reader mode), Reiser4, XFS, ext2/3/4įAT12/16/32, exFAT, NTFS, NTFS5, ext2/3/4, HFS+, ISO9660, Joliet, UDFįAT, FAT32, exFAT, NTFS, HFS+, Ext4/3/2/ReiserFS, XFS/UFSįAT12/16/32, exFAT, NTFS, NTFS5, ext2/3, HFS+, ReFSįAT, FAT32, exFAT, NTFS, HFS+, UFS, Ext4/3/2
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