Inhaltsverzeichnis

Recovery Partition verschieben

https://thedxt.ca/2023/06/moving-windows-recovery-partition-correctly/

The Process

Run CMD as admin

Disabling The Windows Recovery Partition

Disabling the Recovery Partition

The reagentc /disable command will disable the recovery partition and will move the recovery partition into a file named Winre.wim and will be located in C:\Windows\System32\Recovery (you have to enable showing hidden system files if you want to see it)

The Windows Recovery Partition File

DiskPart

Launching DiskPart

Listing the disks in DiskPart and showing the disk is a GPT disk

Pro tip from Matt in the comments, if there’s a * in the column for Gpt that means the disk is likely a GPT disk and if there isn’t a * in the Gpt column the disk is likely MBR. Make a note of this as it will be important further down.

Selecting the disk in DiskPart

Listing the partitions in DiskPart

Selecting the partition in DiskPart

The recovery partition is a protected partition so we need to use a bit more force to delete it.

Forcing the partition deletion

Disk Management

Now if you look in Disk Management you should no longer have the Recovery Partition and it should show up as unallocated.

Disk Management with the Recovery Partition deleted

Expanding the partition but leaving room for the Windows Recovery Partition

Disk Management should now look something like this.

Disk Management after expanding the disk and leaving room for the Windows Recovery Partition

Once the disk is expanded we need to rebuild everything that is needed for Windows to know that the extra space that we left unallocated can be used to for the recovery partition.

Creating a New Simple Volume

Not giving the New Simple Volume a drive letter or a drive path

Naming the New Simple Volume

Disk Management should now look something like this.

Disk Management with the newly created partition that will become the Windows Recovery Partition

Back to DiskPart

Listing the partitions with DiskPart

Selecting the partition with DiskPart

If you have a GPT disk you need to run some very specific command and if you have an MBR disk you need to run different very specific commands.

GPT disk

On GPT disks we need to change the partition ID to de94bba4-06d1-4d40-a16a-bfd50179d6ac which tells Windows that this is a recovery partition

Setting the GPT partition ID in DiskPart

We also need to hide the drive and flag it as a required partition to do that we have to set a GPT attribute to 0x8000000000000001

Setting the GPT attribute in DiskPart

Exiting DiskPart

MBR disk

On MBR disks we need to change partition ID to 27 which will tell Windows that this is a recovery partition.

setting the MBR partition ID in DiskPart

Exiting DiskPart

Enabling The Windows Recovery Partition

Enabling the Windows Recovery Partition

The reagentc /enable command will copy the Winre.wim file from C:\Windows\System32\Recovery into our new recovery partition.

Windows Recovery Partition file is now back on the recovery partition

If you look at Disk Management again everything shows up correctly.

That’s all there is to it.

Technically speaking we did just delete the Windows Recovery Partition but we did so in a way to keep our existing recovery partition safely intact and then we rebuild the recovery partition and re-enabled it.

I prefer doing it this way as it leaves your recovery options intact and you can do it all live without any reboots.

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