That is what I mean.
On 2022-08-25 21:58, Timothy Forbes wrote:
Perhaps the question could be better stated. I'm presuming you mean 
that you have a new nvme (larger?) that you want to replace the 
existing (shown).
I think a basic dd will do it but you'll have to boot to a usb-stick 
based Linux to execute the command. You can't do it while the OS is 
running from your old NVME. You might as well use https://clonezilla.org/
Afterwards, you need to put your new NVME where the original was, 
physically.
On 2022-08-25 7:21 p.m., James wrote:
If I 'dd' my existing nvme drive will I have problems writing it to a 
new one or will it still boot?
/dev/nvme0n1p1      2048    411647    409600   200M EFI System
/dev/nvme0n1p2    411648 205074431 204662784  97.6G Linux filesystem
/dev/nvme0n1p3 205074432 488396799 283322368 135.1G Linux filesystem
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