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I am new to Ubuntu and have installed it side by side with windows 7. Both boot up okay, my problem is I can't get to disk utility to create a partition that I can share between both OSs. Help says go to activities -> overview and select disk utility there. I can't find activities.

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    Is your question "How to create a partition" or "How to find disk utility"?
    – jokerdino
    Dec 10, 2011 at 17:23

7 Answers 7

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Accessing Disk Utility:

I'm sorry you have encountered this level of confusion. Help is referring to the activities overlay that is in GNOME Shell, but you are most likely using Ubuntu's Unity Desktop. Since both are "Shells" for GNOME, the help can overlap sometimes.

What you need to do is open the Unity Dash (it's the button with the Ubuntu logo on the upper left), and type Disk Utility.

Dash the rabbit...

Gparted:

However, as Bruno pointed out, you need to install Gparted to actually create partitions with a GUI.

To do this, open the Software Center, search for Gparted, and click install. (Or click this icon: gparted Install gparted)

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First make sure you have gparted installed. Now, in order to access software using the default Unity interface, either press the Meta key (Windows) or press the Ubuntu logo on the launcher.

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From the Dash Home type gparted or Partition Editor until the GParted Partition Editor appears in the search results

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From here you can either strike Enter or use your mouse to click the Partition Editor icon.

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  • Dont think gparted is installed by default. Dec 10, 2011 at 17:32
  • That's why there are install instructions :) Dec 10, 2011 at 17:36
  • At least you did not get a down-vote before editing the answer :( Dec 10, 2011 at 17:38
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If you want to create partitions and move data around you can do that with several tools, the default installed tool Disk Utility can be called from the dash by pressing the super key and looking for Disk in the search box.

enter image description here

For a better utility that allows you to do more with your partitions I recommend gparted.

Open a terminal (press Ctrl+Alt+T) and install gparted.

sudo apt-get install gparted

gparted is an utility that allows you to create/move/resize partitions around without loosing (hopefully) your data.

After installing it you can just open your dash by pressing the super key and looking for gparted.

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Remember just one thing, you need to have the disks unmounted while doing stuff on them with gparted so you cannot do it on the same disk you boot from (its mounted).

To do it on the disk you boot from you need to use the LiveCD to boot and use the same instructions/program to use it.

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Run gnome-disks from the terminal for Ubuntu 16.04.

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FYI, in Ubuntu 12.10, the Disk Utility is known instead as Disk So don't worry yourself searching for Disk Utility as nothing of that sort exists in the Dashboard.

Its rather Disk

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Press the Super (Windows) key to open the Unity Dash. Type disk. Now you will see the Disk Utility icon in the search results. Click that icon to open Disk Utility.

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I just did a fresh install of Ubuntu 18.04, and it wasn't automatically installed.

I installed it with:

sudo apt-install gnome-disk-utility

Then in the whisker menu (top left icon), I could type "disks" and there it was.

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