How AOMEI Partition Assistant Fixed Windows Shrink Volume Limit for Linux Dual-Boot

A user attempting to install Linux Mint Cinnamon alongside Windows 11 on a Samsung Galaxy Book2 Pro 360 was blocked by Windows Disk Management, which could only free 653 MB instead of the needed 100 GB. The limitation occurs because Windows cannot move locked system files such as the page file, hibernation file, and MFT that sit near the end of the partition. After exhausting native Windows fixes — including disabling hibernation, turning off restore points, and running defragmentation in Safe Mode — the user turned to the free third-party tool AOMEI Partition Assistant Standard. Unlike Windows Disk Management, AOMEI boots into a Windows PE environment before the OS fully loads, allowing it to safely relocate unmovable files; the process took 10–20 minutes on an SSD. The resulting 100 GB of unallocated space was then used to install Linux Mint with an Ext4 partition, reusing the existing EFI System Partition for a successful dual-boot setup.
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