130 Hold To Keep Existing Cache ((free)) - Prepare Exfat Ntfs Drives

# Shrink NTFS from the end (keeps cache safe at the start) ntfsresize -s 120G /dev/sdX1 --no-action # Then adjust partition table with fdisk

In the world of large-scale data management—whether you are running a post-production house with 130 editing bays, a surveillance array with 130 cameras, or a server cluster with 130 hot-swap bays—two file systems dominate the conversation: and NTFS . prepare exfat ntfs drives 130 hold to keep existing cache

Because Windows does not have a native "convert" command for exFAT (unlike FAT32), you must use a workaround to keep your existing data and cache: # Shrink NTFS from the end (keeps cache

If you are using exFAT or NTFS drives on homebrew applications (such as loading backups on a modified console), the system cannot read these drives natively out of the box. It relies on external plugins or homebrew applications—like webMAN MOD or prepISO . /dev/sdb /dev/sdc

/dev/sdb /dev/sdc ... /dev/sdgm # Assuming 130 drives