Many file systems are capable of growing while mounted, and a few can
even shrink. This support must be explicitly enabled at configure time
with the --enable-online-resize flag and depends on a patched libparted.
Also requires kernel >= 3.6 for partition resizing, even if the
partition is in use (BLKPG_RESIZE_PARTITION).
Thanks to Mike Fleetwood for double check mark idea instead of a second
column to show the online grow/shrink.
Bug #694622 - Add support for online resize
In the Create New Partition dialog use ext4 as the default choice for
new file systems. It has been the preferred file system of
distributions for many years. Use ext3 and ext2 as second and third
choice defaults. This handles RHEL/CentOS 5.x which doesn't support
ext4.
Bug #711114 - Change default fs to ext4
Allow all partition warning messages to be selectable and copied. Merge
all the messages into a single Gtk::Label widget so that they can be
selected together.
Use a blank line between individual messages so that each message can be
distinguished. Therefore each message should be formatted as one or more
non-blank lines, with an optional trailing new line. This is true of
GParted internal messages and probably all external messages and errors
from libparted and executed commands too.
Bug #705596 - Partition Information Dialog - let user copy warnings
Applying operations or just scanning the partitions in GParted was
causing all stopped Linux Software RAID arrays to be automatically
started. This is not new with this patch set, but as a result of the
following behaviour which has existed for a long time. Chain of events
goes likes this:
1) Gparted calls commit_to_os() to update the kernel with the new
partition table;
2) Libparted calls ioctl() BLKPG_DEL_PARTITION on every partition to
delete every partition from the kernel. Succeeds on non-busy
partitions only;
3) Kernel emits udev partition remove event on every removed partition;
4) Libparted calls ioctl() BLKPG_ADD_PARTITION on every non-busy
partition to re-add the partition to the kernel;
5) Kernel emits udev partition add event on every added partition;
6) Udev rule:
SUBSYSTEM=="block", ACTION=="add", ENV{ID_FS_TYPE}=="linux_raid_member", \
RUN+="/sbin/mdadm -I $tempnode"
from either /lib/udef/rules.d/64-md-raid.rules or
.../65-md-incremental.rules incrementally starts the member in a
Linux Software RAID array.
Fix by temporarily adding blank override rules files which does nothing,
so that when the udev add and remove events for Linux Software RAID
array member partitions fire nothing is done; but only when required.
Note that really old versions of udev don't have rules to incrementally
start array members and some distributions comment out such rules.
Bug #709640 - Linux Swap Suspend and Software RAID partitions not
recognised
Read the contents of /proc/mdstat file to determine if a device is a
member of of an active RAID array.
$ cat /proc/mdstat
Personalities : [raid1]
md1 : active raid1 sda1[2] sdb1[3]
524224 blocks super 1.0 [2/2] [UU]
md2 : active raid1 sdb2[2] sda2[3](F)
5238720 blocks super 1.1 [2/1] [U_]
md3 : active raid1 sdb3[1]
10477440 blocks super 1.1 [2/1] [_U]
bitmap: 1/1 pages [4KB], 65536KB chunk
md4 : inactive sda4[0](S)
1048564 blocks super 1.2
unused devices: <none>
There are 5 example Linux Software RAID arrays, md1 to md5. All are
RAID1 mirrors with 2 members, in various states.
Array Members Status
md1 sda1, sdb2 Fully operational.
md2 sda2, sdb2 Member sda2 marked as faulty. (Device sda2 is
still in use).
md3 sda3, sdb3 Member sda3 has been removed. (Device sda3 is
not in use).
md4 sda4, sdb4 Incremental start of member sda4 only. (Neither
member devices is in use).
md5 sda5, sdb5 Array stopped. (Neither member device is in
use).
Also disable "Unmount" in the partition menu for active RAID array
members.
Bug #709640 - Linux Swap Suspend and Software RAID partitions not
recognised
Recognise in kernel, Linux Swap Suspend partitions. (When hibernated
the kernel write the RAM out to swap space and changes the magic string
from swap space to suspend). Recognition required either
libparted >= 1.8.8.1 or blkid from util-linux >= 2.15 or before that
blkid from e2fsprogs >= 1.39.
Recognise Linux Software RAID partitions. Recognition requires blkid
from util-linux >= 2.15.
Example:
# blkid /dev/sda10 /dev/sda11
/dev/sda10: ... TYPE="swsuspend"
/dev/sda11: ... TYPE="linux_raid_member"
# parted /dev/sda print
Model: ATA SAMSUNG HM500JI (scsi)
Disk /dev/sda: 500GB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
Partition Table: msdos
Number Start End Size Type File system Flags
...
10 361GB 362GB 1074MB logical swsusp
11 362GB 363GB 1074MB logical raid
Bug #709640 - Linux Swap Suspend and Software RAID partitions not
recognised
Step 3 of 3:
Now that all label widgets are created with ALIGN_LEFT and ALIGN_CENTER
alignment remove the x_align and y_align parameters from mk_label() and
always use this alignment. Also specify this alignment via floats
rather than enumerators, one of which was deprecated.
Bug #652044 - uses deprecated APIs
Step 2 of 3:
ALIGN_RIGHT was only used for the size figures in the GParted > Devices
device selector with radio buttons. Change to ALIGN_LEFT and adjust the
widget packing to maintain appearance.
Bug #652044 - uses deprecated APIs
Gtkmm release 2.24 in February 2011 deprecated the use of these
alignment enumerators superseding them with:
Deprecated enumerator Use instead
Gtk::ALIGN_LEFT Gtk::ALIGN_START
Gtk::ALIGN_RIGHT Gtk::ALIGN_END
Gtk::ALIGN_TOP Gtk::ALIGN_START
Gtk::ALIGN_BOTTOM Gtk::ALIGN_END
gtkmm: gtkmm Enums and Flags [2.24]
https://developer.gnome.org/gtkmm/2.24/group__gtkmmEnums.html
The deprecated alignment enumerators were only used in the creation of
Gtk::Label widgets by method Utils::mk_label(). In all but three cases
the alignment was left, center. So make all labels with alignment left,
center and then stop using the deprecated enumerators.
Step 1 of 3:
ALIGN_TOP was only used for these 2 labels:
"Path:" text in View > Device Information;
"Path:" text in Partition > Information.
Use of ALIGN_TOP makes no difference to these labels so just change to
ALIGN_CENTER.
Bug #652044 - uses deprecated APIs
This enhancement removes the virtual file systems from the list of file
systems (shown below) to be masked.
The following output was captured using Fedora 19:
$ systemctl list-units --full --all -t mount
UNIT LOAD ACTIVE SUB DESCRIPTION
-.mount loaded active mounted /
boot.mount loaded active mounted /boot
dev-hugepages.mount loaded active mounted Huge Pages File System
dev-mqueue.mount loaded active mounted POSIX Message Queue File System
proc-sys-fs-binfmt_misc.mount loaded inactive dead Arbitrary Executable File Formats File System
run-user-1000-gvfs.mount loaded active mounted /run/user/1000/gvfs
sys-fs-fuse-connections.mount loaded active mounted FUSE Control File System
sys-kernel-config.mount loaded active mounted Configuration File System
sys-kernel-debug.mount loaded active mounted Debug File System
tmp.mount loaded active mounted Temporary Directory
LOAD = Reflects whether the unit definition was properly loaded.
ACTIVE = The high-level unit activation state, i.e. generalization of SUB.
SUB = The low-level unit activation state, values depend on unit type.
10 loaded units listed.
To show all installed unit files use 'systemctl list-unit-files'.
Bug #708378 - Advertised new feature: Use systemctl runtime mask to
prevent automounting (#701676) doesn't work
A mistake was made in the following commit:
Use systemctl runtime mask to prevent automounting (#701676)
4c109df9b5
The intention was to use 'systemctl list-units' rather than
'systemctl list-unit-files' so that auto-generated mount files would
also be masked and hence prevented from auto-mounting.
Now 'systemctl list-units' is used.
Bug #708378 - Advertised new feature: Use systemctl runtime mask to
prevent automounting (#701676) doesn't work
Turn on the text progress bar for the resize2fs command. Looks like:
# resize2fs -p /dev/sda13 262144
resize2fs 1.41.12 (17-May-2010)
Resizing the filesystem on /dev/sda13 to 262144 (4k) blocks.
Begin pass 2 (max = 97177)
Relocating blocks XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Begin pass 3 (max = 80)
Scanning inode table XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Begin pass 4 (max = 5597)
Updating inode references XXXXXXXXX-------------------------------
Bug #709276 - Percentage indicator for subcommand
Add concept of cursor position within the current line, separate from
the end of the buffer. This is so that programs which output a text
progress bar using backspace, such as resize2fs -p, are displayed
correctly.
Bug #709276 - Percentage indicator for subcommand
All the code was there in btrfs::read_uuid() to read the UUID from the
btrfs-show command. It just needed enabling.
This is only relevant when: (1) the blkid command is unavailable as
GParted primarily reads the UUID through the FS_Info cache using the
blkid command, and (2) the btrfs command is unavailable and the btrfs
module uses the older btrfs-show command instead.
For active swap space read the usage from /proc/swaps. (Linux kernel
uses units of 1 KiB). By definition inactive swap space is 100% free.
$ cat /proc/swaps
Filename Type Size Used Priority
/dev/sda2 partition 5242876 430552 -1
Always set fs.read = FS::EXTERNAL even if /proc/swaps doesn't exist so
that an attempt is made to open the file generating a specific error, in
addition to the generic error.
open("/proc/swaps", O_RDONLY): No such file or directory
Unable to read the contents of this file system!
Because of this some operations may be unavailable.
The cause might be a missing software package.
The following list of software packages is required for linux-
swap file system support: util-linux.
Closes Bug #708107 - Usage of swap space is not reported
A "Force Cancel" button and proper cancel support was added to
GParted 0.15.0 with the following commit:
Add proper cancel support (#601239)
89de9a5026
Part of Bug #707070 - Update Help Manual with GPT flags, Force Cancel
button, etc.
Enable the text progress bar and percentage complete from the e2fsck
command. Looks like:
# e2fsck -f -y -v -C 0 /dev/sda8
e2fsck 1.41.12 (17-May-2010)
Pass 1: Checking inodes, blocks, and sizes
Pass 2: Checking directory structure
test8: |========================================= / 73.6%
Note that e2fsck deliberately brackets the progress bar with control-A
and control-B characters when it detects that it is not being run from a
terminal so that logsave(8) can exclude the progress bar from being
written to a log file. As GParted doesn't run e2fsck via a pty it
receives these control characters. Ignore them.
References:
Change e2fsck to bracket its progress bar output with ctrl-A and ctrl-B
http://git.kernel.org/cgit/fs/ext2/e2fsprogs.git/commit/?id=bc34d6be65cb93a65451ad209cfea2f98b03fd22
Don't print ^A and ^B chars when e2fsck is talking directly to a tty
http://git.kernel.org/cgit/fs/ext2/e2fsprogs.git/commit/?id=54a31a3b2e432c124aa03442f2983c4f4d4a974c
Closes Bug #697662 - Do not hide the progress of the tools used
Remove the -P, no progress bar option, from the ntfsresize command.
This allows the command to display the %age complete on its output which
is displayed in the operation details dialog, updated in real time.
Possible since:
Bug #685740 - Refactor to use asynchronous command execution
Bug #697662 - Do not hide the progress of the tools used
Currently the btrfs command outputs figures to 2 decimal places followed
by an SI multiplier, e.g. 1.00GB.
This patch to btrfs-progs has been included in the integration
repository and will likely be included in the official btrfs-progs
repository at some point. It changes btrfs-progs to use IEC
multipliers, e.g. 1.00GiB. In fact multipliers already aren't used for
figures less than 1024.
[PATCH] btrfs-progs: use IEC units for size
http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.file-systems.btrfs/26888https://patchwork.kernel.org/patch/2825841/
Make GParted capable of also accepting IEC prefix multipliers, just "B"
for bytes and no multiplier, as well as an optional space between the
number and multiplier. Therefore accept values like these:
1.00GB 1.00 GB
1.00GiB 1.00 GiB
1073741824B 1073741824 B
1073741824
Closes Bug #706914 - Prepare for btrfs tools using IEC prefix
multipliers
With recent btrfs-progs, GParted failed to format a btrfs file system
over the top of an existing one. Make btrfs failed with this error:
# mkfs.btrfs /dev/sdb1
...
/dev/sdb1 appears to contain an existing filesystem (btrfs).
Use the -f option to force overwrite.
With this commit to btrfs-progs on 2013-02-19, mkfs.btrfs checks for
existing file system signatures, including all mirror copies of btrfs
super blocks, before writing to the partition.
http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/mason/btrfs-progs.git/commit/?id=2a2d8e1962e8b6cda7b0a7584f6d2fb95d442cb6
btrfs-progs: require mkfs -f force option to overwrite filesystem or partition table
Make GParted clear all the mirror copies of the btrfs file system super
blocks as erase_filesystem_signatures() is intended to prevent detection
of old signatures. This also avoids having to determine if the -f
option to mkfs.btrfs is available before trying to use it.
Closes Bug #705426 - Formatting Existing BTRFS Partition as BTRFS Fails
Because mkfs.btrfs Is Not Run with "-f"
Unfortunately a regression was introduced with GParted 0.14.1 wherein
linux-swap grow and shrink operations were broken. This regression was
a direct result of the following commit:
Prevent file system grow when partition grow fails (#686668)
fd96328920
The regression did not result in an error in the GUI, but rather the
linux-swap file system was not "resized" to the correct partition size.
The logic error introduced with the above commit listed has now been
fixed.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION ON LINUX-SWAP RESIZING
Currently no command line tools are available for resizing linux-swap.
However, since linux-swap does not contain data in the usual sense, we
simulate resizing linux-swap by re-creating (maximizing to fill
partition) the linux-swap file system with the same UUID and volume
label. To work correctly, the linux-swap file system must be re-created
after the final partition resize action has occurred.
Closes Bug #706604 - Failure to properly grow or shrink linux-swap when
resizing
Under GNOME Shell a running instance of GParted was getting named
"Gpartedbin". Ultimately GNOME Shell [1] uses the WM_CLASS X Window
property [2], which GDK defaults from the executable name.
$ xprop WM_NAME WM_CLASS
(Click on running GParted window)
WM_NAME(STRING) = "/dev/sda - GParted"
WM_CLASS(STRING) = "gpartedbin", "Gpartedbin"
Set the Class name, second string of the WM_CLASS X Window property, to
"GParted". (This prevents the use of the '--class' GTK+/GDK common
command line option [3] to override the class name, but I expect nobody
ever uses the option. GNOME Terminal has the same limitation. It also
has the same change setting the Class name [4]).
References:
[1] Application Based GNOME 3
https://wiki.gnome.org/GnomeShell/ApplicationBased
[2] WM_CLASS Property, Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual
http://tronche.com/gui/x/icccm/sec-4.html#s-4.1.2.5
[3] Running GTK+ Applications, Common command line options
https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/stable/gtk-running.html
[4] Bug #685742 - Window class of terminals doesn't match the desktop
file name
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685742https://git.gnome.org/browse/gnome-terminal/commit/?id=3370c0e51159f5be476b909e94ac05e5362dd28a
Closes Bug #705323 - Shows up as 'Gpartedbin' in GNOME Shell