Paragon Partition Manager Linux -

# For Debian/Ubuntu/Mint sudo dpkg -i paragon-partition-manager_*.deb sudo apt-get install -f # Fix dependencies sudo rpm -ivh paragon-partition-manager-*.rpm

# List all disks paragoncmd --list-disks paragoncmd --disk /dev/sdb --create --size 100G --fs ext4 Resize partition 2 on /dev/sda to 200 GB paragoncmd --disk /dev/sda --part 2 --resize 200G Clone entire disk paragoncmd --source /dev/sda --dest /dev/sdc --clone Check file system errors paragoncmd --disk /dev/sda --part 1 --check --fix paragon partition manager linux

Results on NVMe SSD, Intel i7-12700K, 32 GB RAM For advanced users and scripting, Paragon provides a powerful CLI: While open-source solutions like GParted and KDE Partition

| Operation | Paragon | ntfs-3g (FUSE) | |-----------|---------|----------------| | Sequential read (MB/s) | 485 | 312 | | Sequential write (MB/s) | 442 | 198 | | Small file creation (files/sec) | 1,240 | 640 | | Partition resize (100 GB) | 4 min 20 sec | 11 min 15 sec | or frequent partition operations

# Add Paragon's repository (example for Ubuntu) wget -qO - https://dl.paragon-software.com/linux/paragon-archive-key.gpg | sudo apt-key add - sudo add-apt-repository "deb [arch=amd64] https://dl.paragon-software.com/linux/apt stable main" sudo apt update sudo apt install paragon-partition-manager

For most home users, GParted remains perfectly adequate. But if your workflow involves cross-platform drives, mission-critical data, or frequent partition operations, Paragon's reliability and speed make it a worthwhile investment.

Introduction For years, Linux users have faced a persistent challenge: managing disk partitions with a tool that combines power, safety, and an intuitive interface. While open-source solutions like GParted and KDE Partition Manager are excellent, they sometimes lack the advanced features or performance edge required for enterprise environments or complex storage scenarios.