Move code which queries the file system label and UUID of a partition
into a separate helper function.
Bug 741430 - GParted cannot recognise LVM signature on unpartitioned
drive
Refactor GParted internal file system signature detection to remove code
duplication. There were 5 separate copies of code to: allocate a
buffer, open, read and close the device, free the buffer and compare the
signature.
Bug 741430 - GParted cannot recognise LVM signature on unpartitioned
drive
Embedded devices (Android) use GPT partition names to identify
partitions, instead of file system labels. Add support for viewing and
changing them.
As partition names are used to provide unique identification they are
never copied when copying the contents of one partition to another.
Note that GNU/Linux uses file system labels, UUIDs or device names for
identification during the boot process and afterwards so while partition
names can be used, they are optional and purely for user information.
Bug 741424 - Add support for GPT partition names
This and the following few commits rename variables, methods, classes,
etc from *label_partition* to *label_filesystem* so that the code also
reflects that it is the label of the file system that is being modified
and to separate it from the name partition operation about to be added.
enum OPERATION_LABEL_PARTITION -> OPERATION_LABEL_FILESYSTEM
Bug 741424 - Add support for GPT partition names
Only recognises ReFS file system. No other actions are supported.
Requires blkid from util-linux >= 2.24.
Bug #738471 - ReFS file system is not recognised
Helper to check whether a recognised file system type is supported by
GParted or not. Supported means there is an implementation class and
will appear in the File System Support dialog.
Make supported_filesystem() a static member function so that it can be
called without a class object so that GParted_Core::GParted_Core()
initialiser isn't called multiple times. This requires FILESYSTEM_MAP
to become a static member variable too.
Bug #738471 - ReFS file system is not recognised
get_filesystem_object() takes a constant reference to a FILESYSTEM, but
FILESYSTEM is just an enumeration. So that's a pointer to a constant
int. Just pass by value instead.
RHEL / CentOS 5.6 and later officially support ext4 file system [1].
From RHEL / CentOS 5.3 ext4 file system was included as a technology
preview. Ext4 file system tools are in a separate package e4fsprogs,
using uniquely named commands. The standard e2fsprogs commands only
support ext2 and ext3 file systems.
# mkfs.ext4 /dev/sdb3
# tune2fs -l /dev/sdb3
tune2fs 1.39 (29-May-2006)
tune2fs: Filesystem has unsupported feature(s) while trying to open /dev/sdb3
Couldn't find valid filesystem superblock.
# echo $?
1
# tune4fs -l /dev/sdb3
tune4fs 1.41.12 (17-May-2010)
Filesystem volume name: <none>
Last mounted on: <not available>
Filesystem UUID: ba4a9d58-7728-4b47-8a90-80e772615637
Filesystem magic number: 0xEF53
Filesystem revision #: 1 (dynamic)
Filesystem features: has_journal ext_attr resize_inode dir_index filetype extent flex_bg sparse_super large_file huge_file uninit_bg dir_nlink extra_isize
...
For ext4 only, search for the e4fsprogs specific commands first and the
standard e2fsprogs commands second.
[1] RHEL 5.6 Release Notes, 5. Filesystems and Storage
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/5/html/5.6_Release_Notes/ar01s05.html
Bug #738706 - GParted doesn't support ext4 on RHEL/CentOS 5.x
The device combobox was getting drawn blank, then getting drawn again
with the selected device. This was happening because at the start of
Win_GParted::refresh_combo_devices() the GTK model behind the combobox,
liststore_devices, was cleared, changing the active item, causing the
combobox to get redrawn empty. After the GTK model had been repopulated
the active item was reset causing the comboxbox to get redrawn again,
now showing the selected device. Call flow:
Win_GParted::refresh_combo_devices()
liststore_devices->clear()
//Gtk::Combobox emits signal_change. Registered callbacks
//called.
Win_GParted::combo_devices_changed()
Win_GParted::Refresh_Visual()
...
...
combo_devices.set_active(current_device);
//Gtk::Combobox emits signal_change. Registered callbacks
//called.
Win_GParted::combo_devices_changed()
Win_GParted::Refresh_Visual()
...
This has always been the case, since the device combobox was first added
to GParted before version 0.1 by commit:
3a4b43e0ad
replaced deprecated OptionMenu with ComboBox ...
Fix by temporarily blocking the devices comboxbox from emitting
signal_changed while the GTK model behind the combobox is recreated.
However, since automatic selection of the largest free space was added
[1] in GParted 0.15.0, a more noticeable flashing redraw issue was
caused in which the partition graphic and partition list were both drawn
blank then redrawn fully populated. Some distributions were not
affected by this at all, some only experienced a single flash and others
suffered from two or more flashing redraws. Some affected
distributions: CentOS 5.10, 6.5, 7.0, Debian 6, Fedora 14, 19, 20,
Ubuntu 13.10, Xubuntu 14.04 LTS. Did not occur on Kubuntu 12.04 LTS.
[1] 5b53c12f6e
Select largest unallocated partition by default (#667365)
Bug #696149 - Double refresh of display introduced with default
unallocated space
Remove HAVE_LIBPARTED_3_1_0_PLUS definition and replace Autoconf
check for libparted >= 3.1
Currently uses custom check which compiles an executable to check for
libparted version >= 3.1 to determine the availability of the library
parted-fs-resize and the need to include the header <parted/filesys.h>.
Change to use a direct Autoconf check to determine the availability of
the ped_file_system_resize() function in the parted-fs-resize library.
Remove inclusion of the header <parted/filesys.h> as it has always been
included via <parted/parted.h>, at least as far back as parted 1.8.0,
and even in parted 3.0 when ped_file_system_resize() and libparted file
system resize capability didn't exist.
Bug #734718 - Update Autoconf version specific libparted checks and
defines to feature specific ones
While one partition is busy, reformat another partition from the command
line. Afterwards parted/libparted still detects the original file
system and GParted shows errors from the file system specific tools
reporting the new file system doesn't exist. Only limitation is that
the new new file system must be recognised by libparted (or by GParted's
fallback file system signature detection).
Case #1, File system reformatting:
# parted /dev/sdb print
Model: ATA SAMSUNG SSD UM41 (scsi)
Disk /dev/sdb: 8012MB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
Partition Table: msdos
Number Start End Size Type File system Flags
1 1049kB 2149MB 2147MB primary ext2
2 2149MB 4296MB 2147MB primary ext2
# mount | fgrep sdb
/dev/sdb1 on /mnt/1 type ext2 (rw)
# mkfs.xfs -f /dev/sdb2
# blkid /dev/sdb2
/dev/sdb2: UUID="c31823a2-b81b-46fa-8246-0a59695e4834" TYPE="xfs"
# parted /dev/sdb print
Model: ATA SAMSUNG SSD UM41 (scsi)
Disk /dev/sdb: 8012MB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
Partition Table: msdos
Number Start End Size Type File system Flags
1 1049kB 2149MB 2147MB primary ext2
2 2149MB 4296MB 2147MB primary ext2
# e2label /dev/sdb2
e2label: Bad magic number in super-block while trying to open /dev/sdb2
Couldn't find valid filesystem superblock.
# dumpe2fs /dev/sdb2
dumpe2fs 1.41.12 (17-May-2010)
dumpe2fs: Bad magic number in super-block while trying to open /dev/sdb2
Couldn't find valid filesystem superblock.
Case #2, Removing device from multi-device btrfs:
# btrfs filesystem show /dev/sdb1
Label: none uuid: a05db434-efd5-4e8c-902f-05f89a88b610
Total devices 2 FS bytes used 156.00KB
devid 2 size 2.00GB used 512.00MB path /dev/sdb2
devid 1 size 2.00GB used 240.75MB path /dev/sdb1
# mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/1
# btrfs device delete /dev/sdb2
# btrfs filesystem show /dev/sdb1
Label: none uuid: a05db434-efd5-4e8c-902f-05f89a88b610
Total devices 1 FS bytes used 92.00KB
devid 1 size 2.00GB used 714.25MB path /dev/sdb1
# btrfs filesystem show /dev/sdb2
and GParted reports this error for partition /dev/sdb2:
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 btrfs
file system support: btrfs-tools.
This is another case of libparted reading from the whole disk device
(/dev/sdb) yet the file system tools use the partition specific block
device (/dev/sdb2), and the Linux buffer cache not providing cache
coherency. Previous scenario was fixed with:
797f0b8eeb
Flush device after wiping a file system (#688882)
This affects libparted 2.0 to 3.1 inclusive and is fixed by:
http://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/parted.git/commit/?id=fb99ba5ebd0dc34204fc9f1014131d5d494805bc
Revert "linux-commit: do not unnecessarily open partition device nodes"
Fix by calling ped_device_sync() to guarantee cache coherency for each
device during scanning.
Bug #723842 - GParted resizes the wrong filesystem (does not pass the
devid to btrfs filesystem resize)
With linux 3.5 and later, the device used to mount a btrfs file system
is updated in /proc/mounts when the previous mounting device is removed
from the file system. Most recent distributions make /etc/mtab a
symbolic link to /proc/mounts. However some still have /etc/mtab as a
plain file only updated by mount and umount, thus showing the old device
name which is no longer part of the file system.
On Ubuntu 13.10, which has /etc/mtab as a plain file managed by mount
and umount:
# mkfs.btrfs /dev/sdb1
# mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/1
# btrfs device add /dev/sdb2 /mnt/1
# btrfs device delete /dev/sdb1 /mnt/1
# sync
# btrfs filesystem show /dev/sdb1
# btrfs filesystem show /dev/sdb2
Label: none uuid: e47775a6-e5ad-4fb4-9ea4-1570aa5b4009
Total devices 2 FS bytes used 28.00KB
devid 2 size 2.00GB used 272.00MB path /dev/sdb2
# fgrep btrfs /proc/mounts
/dev/sdb2 /mnt/1 btrfs rw,relatime,space_cache 0 0
# ls -l /etc/mtab
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 842 Apr 15 19:41 /etc/mtab
# fgrep btrfs /etc/mtab
/dev/sdb1 /mnt/1 btrfs rw 0 0
This causes GParted to report /dev/sdb1 as busy and mounted at /mnt/1
when it is no longer mounted. This effects recent releases of Ubuntu,
13.04, 13.10 and 14.04.
Either /etc/mtab is a symlink and is identical to /proc/mounts or
/etc/mtab is a plain file with wrong information. Fix by not reading
mounted file systems from /etc/mtab.
However old distributions only contain 'rootfs' and '/dev/root' device
names for the / (root) file system with '/dev/root' being a block device
rather than a symlink to the true device. For example from CentOS 5.x:
# fgrep ' / ' /proc/mounts
rootfs / rootfs rw 0 0
/dev/root / ext3 rw,data=ordered 0 0
# ls -l /dev/root
brw------- 1 root root 8, 3 Jun 4 2013 /dev/root
This prevents identification, and therefore busy detection, of the
device containing the / (root) file system. Used to read /etc/mtab to
get the root file system device name.
# fgrep ' / ' /etc/mtab
/dev/sda3 / ext3 rw 0 0
# ls -l /dev/sda3
brw-r----- 1 root disk 8, 3 Jun 4 2013 /dev/sda3
As per commit:
409096f739
improved scanning for root mountpoint (/) ...
but, as discussed above, this contains an out of date device name after
the mounting device has been dynamically removed from a multi-device
btrfs, thus identifying the wrong device as busy. Instead fall back to
reading mounted file systems from the output of the mount command, but
only when required.
# mount | fgrep ' / '
/dev/sda3 on / type ext3 (rw)
Bug #723842 - GParted resizes the wrong filesystem (does not pass the
devid to btrfs filesystem resize)
Linux can only show a single device name in /proc/mounts and /etc/mtab
for each mounted btrfs, even if it is a multi-device file system. So
GParted only shows a mount point for one of the devices in the btrfs, no
matter how many devices are part of the file system.
# mkfs.btrfs /dev/sdb1 /dev/sdb2
# btrfs filesystem show /dev/sdb1
Label: none uuid: 36eb51a2-2927-4c92-820f-b2f0b5cdae50
Total devices 2 FS bytes used 156.00KB
devid 2 size 2.00GB used 512.00MB path /dev/sdb2
devid 1 size 2.00GB used 240.75MB path /dev/sdb1
# mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/1
# grep btrfs /proc/mounts
/dev/sdb1 /mnt/1 btrfs rw,seclabel,relatime,ssd,space_cache 0 0
GParted only shows the mount point for /dev/sdb1 as /mnt/1, but nothing
for /dev/sdb2.
Make GParted report the same mount point for all devices included in a
multi-device btrfs file system.
Add btrfs specific get_mount_device() method to report the mounting
device, if any, for the btrfs file system in the occupying the device in
question. Uses the existing cache of btrfs file system device
membership. Also extract common code from GParted_Core::
set_mountpoints() into set_mountpoints_helper().
Bug #723842 - GParted resizes the wrong filesystem (does not pass the
devid to btrfs filesystem resize)
Busy detection of file systems works by checking if the device is
mounted (appears in the mount_info map). For a multi-device btrfs file
system this will only report one of the devices as busy, not all of
them.
# btrfs filesystem show /dev/sdb1
Label: none uuid: 36eb51a2-2927-4c92-820f-b2f0b5cdae50
Total devices 2 FS bytes used 156.00KB
devid 2 size 2.00GB used 512.00MB path /dev/sdb2
devid 1 size 2.00GB used 240.75MB path /dev/sdb1
# mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/1
# grep btrfs /proc/mounts
/dev/sdb1 /mnt/1 btrfs rw,seclabel,relatime,ssd,space_cache 0 0
GParted will only report /dev/sdb1 as busy, but not /dev/sdb2.
Add btrfs specific is_busy() method which reports the device as busy if
any of the devices in the btrfs file system are mounted. This uses a
cache which maps device membership in all btrfs file systems. The cache
is cleared on GParted refresh and incrementally populated as each btrfs
partition is checked for busy status.
WARNING:
Removal of the mounting device from a btrfs file system makes it
impossible to determine whether the file system is mounted or not for
linux <= 3.4. This is because /proc/mounts continues to show the old
device which is no longer a member of the file system.
# btrfs device delete /dev/sdb1 /mnt/1
# sync
# grep btrfs /proc/mounts
/dev/sdb1 /mnt/1 btrfs rw,seclabel,relatime,ssd,space_cache 0 0
# btrfs filesystem show /dev/sdb1
# btrfs filesystem show /dev/sdb2
Label: none uuid: 36eb51a2-2927-4c92-820f-b2f0b5cdae50
Total devices 1 FS bytes used 28.00KB
devid 2 size 2.00GB used 1.02GB path /dev/sdb2
Fixed in linux 3.5 by commit:
Btrfs: implement ->show_devname
https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=9c5085c147989d48dfe74194b48affc23f376650
Bug #723842 - GParted resizes the wrong filesystem (does not pass the
devid to btrfs filesystem resize)
Add static member function GParted_Core::is_dev_mounted() so that other
modules can determine if a particular partition contains a mounted file
system or not.
Make it a static member function so that it can be called without
needing the gparted_core object. Extend to make the group of
manipulated variables (mount_info, fstab_info) and manipulating
functions (init_maps(), read_mountpoints_from_file(),
read_mountpoints_from_file_swaps(), get_all_mountpoints()) static too.
Bug #723842 - GParted resizes the wrong filesystem (does not pass the
devid to btrfs filesystem resize)
GParted's primary inbuilt busy detection method is "is the partition
mounted?". A custom method is used for LVM2 PV because its not a
mounted file system.
Make busy detection selectable per file system type.
.fs.busy = FS::NONE (default)
No busy detection.
.fs.busy = FS::GPARTED
Use internal GParted method which checks if the partition is
mounted.
.fs.busy = FS:EXTERNAL
Call the file system type's member function is_busy().
LVM2 PV busy detection changes from a special case to just electing to
call the lvm2_pv::is_busy() method. Linux Software RAID remains a
special case because it's only recognised, but not otherwise supported.
Bug #723842 - GParted resizes the wrong filesystem (does not pass the
devid to btrfs filesystem resize)
Fragment of debugging and valgrind output:
D: tid=2193 main()
...
D: tid=2202 GParted_Core::set_devices_thread()
...
D: tid=2202 Utils::execute_command(command="dumpe2fs -h /dev/sda1", output, error, use_C_locale=1)
D: tid=2202 this=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::PipeCapture()
D: tid=2202 this=0x13fef4f0 PipeCapture::PipeCapture()
D: tid=2202 this=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::connect_signal()
D: sourceid=77
D: tid=2202 this=0x13fef4f0 PipeCapture::connect_signal()
D: sourceid=78
D: tid=2193 data=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::_OnReadable()
D: tid=2193 this=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::OnReadable()
D: signal_update.emit()
D: return true
D: tid=2193 data=0x13fef4f0 PipeCapture::_OnReadable()
D: tid=2193 this=0x13fef4f0 PipeCapture::OnReadable()
D: signal_update.emit()
D: return true
D: tid=2193 data=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::_OnReadable()
D: tid=2193 this=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::OnReadable()
D: signal_update.emit()
D: return true
D: tid=2193 data=0x13fef4f0 PipeCapture::_OnReadable()
D: tid=2193 this=0x13fef4f0 PipeCapture::OnReadable()
D: signal_eof.emit()
D: return false
D: (!rc) &(pc->sourceid)=0x13fef518
D: tid=2193 data=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::_OnReadable()
D: tid=2193 this=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::OnReadable()
D: signal_update.emit()
D: return true
D: tid=2193 data=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::_OnReadable()
D: tid=2193 this=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::OnReadable()
D: signal_update.emit()
D: return true
D: tid=2193 data=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::_OnReadable()
D: tid=2193 this=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::OnReadable()
D: signal_eof.emit()
D: tid=2202 this=0x13fef4f0 PipeCapture::~PipeCapture()
D: sourceid=0
D: tid=2202 this=0x13fef4a0 PipeCapture::~PipeCapture()
D: sourceid=77
D: return false
D: (!rc) &(pc->sourceid)=0x13fef4c8
==2193== Thread 1:
==2193== Invalid write of size 4
==2193== at 0x490580: GParted::PipeCapture::_OnReadable(_GIOChannel*, GIOCondition, void*) (PipeCapture.cc:56)
==2193== by 0x38662492A5: g_main_context_dispatch (gmain.c:3066)
==2193== by 0x3866249627: g_main_context_iterate.isra.24 (gmain.c:3713)
==2193== by 0x3866249A39: g_main_loop_run (gmain.c:3907)
==2193== by 0x3D7FD45C26: gtk_main (gtkmain.c:1257)
==2193== by 0x469743: GParted::GParted_Core::set_devices(std::vector<GParted::Device, std::allocator<GParted::Device> >&) (GParted_Core.cc:155)
==2193== by 0x4A78F1: GParted::Win_GParted::menu_gparted_refresh_devices() (Win_GParted.cc:1259)
==2193== by 0x4A7886: GParted::Win_GParted::on_show() (Win_GParted.cc:1253)
==2193== by 0x3D82B2009C: Gtk::Widget_Class::show_callback(_GtkWidget*) (widget.cc:3855)
==2193== by 0x3867210297: g_closure_invoke (gclosure.c:777)
==2193== by 0x3867221B86: signal_emit_unlocked_R (gsignal.c:3516)
==2193== by 0x386722A0F1: g_signal_emit_valist (gsignal.c:3330)
==2193== Address 0x13fef4c8 is not stack'd, malloc'd or (recently) free'd
==2193==
PipeCapture.cc (with debugging):
46 gboolean PipeCapture::_OnReadable( GIOChannel *source,
47 GIOCondition condition,
48 gpointer data )
49 {
50 std::cout << "D: tid=" << (long int)syscall(SYS_gettid) << " data=" << data << " PipeCapture::_OnReadable()" << std::endl;
51 PipeCapture *pc = static_cast<PipeCapture *>(data);
52 gboolean rc = pc->OnReadable( Glib::IOCondition(condition) );
53 if (!rc)
54 {
55 std::cout << "D: (!rc) &(pc->sourceid)=" << &(pc->sourceid) << std::endl;
56 pc->sourceid = 0;
57 }
58 return rc;
59 }
The use after free across threads only happens when an external program
is being executed from a thread other than the main() thread. This is
because by default glib registered callbacks are run by the glib main
loop, which is only called from the main() thread with Gtk::Main::run().
Event sequence:
tid=2193 tid=2202
main()
...
GParted_Core::set_devices()
Glib::Thread::create(... set_devices_thread ...)
Gtk::Main::run() GParted_Core::set_devices_thread()
...
Utils::execute_command("dumpe2fs ... /dev/sda1" ...)
Glib::spawn_async_with_pipes()
PipeCapture outputcapture(out, output)
outputcapture.connect_signal()
//Glib main loop runs callback
PipeCapture::_OnReadable()
pc->OnReadable()
//output read
signal_update.emit()
return true
...
//Glib main loop runs callback
PipeCapture::_OnReadable()
pc->OnReadable()
//eof reached
[1] signal_eof.emit()
return status.exit_status
[2] PipeCapture::~PipeCapture()
[3] return false
[4] pc->sourceid = 0
What is happening is that the PipeCapture destructor [2] is running in
the set_devices_thread() thread and freeing the object's memory as soon
as signal_eof.emit() [1] has been called. Then signal_eof.emit()
returns back to OnReadable() which then returns false [3] back to the
_OnReadable() callback function which then assigns 0 to sourceid member
variable [4] in the already freed object, detected by valgrind as:
Invalid write of size 4
at ... GParted::PipeCapture::_OnReadable(...) (PipeCapture.cc:56)
This is happening because PipeCapture member variable sourceid is being
saved, in a different thread, just so the _OnReadable() callback can be
removed. However a glib IOChannel callback, type GIOFunc(), returning
false will be automatically removed.
GLib Reference Manual 2.26 / IO Channels
https://developer.gnome.org/glib/2.26/glib-IO-Channels.html#GIOFunc
GIOFunc()
Returns : the function should return FALSE if the event source
should be removed
Therefore fix by just not saving the event sourceid at all, and not
calling g_source_remove() to manually remove the callback, but instead
letting glib automatically remove the callback when it returns false.
Bug #731752 - Write after free cross thread race in
PipeCapture::_OnReadable()
OperationDetail was storing its children in a std::vector. This means they
can be moved around in memory arbitrarily, going through indeterminate
lifetimes. This is generally a bad thing for any non trivial object and
in the case of OperationDetail, it created havoc with the way it maintains
pointers between parent/child objects for signal connections. It will now
keep only pointers to children in a std::vector instead, so their lifetime
can be controlled, fixing various crashes.
Bug 729139 - Refactor OperationDetail to address random behavior
As part of the work on bug 652044 - uses deprecated APIs, selectable
vertical alignment was defaulted to ALIGN_CENTER for all labels. The
relevant commits can be viewed in comment 26 of said bug report.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=652044#c26
For multi-line labels a vertical ALIGN_CENTER value is not
consistently aesthetically pleasing. This becomes obvious when a
single-line heading label is paired with a multi-line value label.
To improve the aesthetics, a vertical alignment of ALIGN_TOP is
preferred.
Hence re-add the ability to optionally specify a vertical alignment for
labels. If a yalign value is not specified a default vertical alignment
of ALIGN_CENTER is used.
Make the dialog resizable, add a vertical scrollbar to the information
and messages section, and set the initial height to ensure the dialog
fits entirely on an 800x600 screen.
A default height is required because some window managers, such as
fluxbox used in GParted Live, only permit resizing the height by using
the bottom corners of the dialog. If the dialog is too large for the
screen then the user would not be able to resize it.
Note that two default initial heights are used in an effort to minimize
the amount of extra whitespace.
Bug 690542 - Partition Information Dialog Warning not readable
The code used to unnecessarily destroy and re-create the file system
objects on every scan for file system support tools.
Instead only create the file system objects once and just call each
object's get_filesystem_support() method on each rescan.
Prior to commit:
1f3b11748e
Remove GParted_Core::p_filesystem (#683149)
set_proper_filesystems() used to set GParted_Core::p_filesystem member
variable to one of the FileSystem objects, but that was just treating it
like a local variable. After the commit local variables named
p_filesystem were used where required and set_proper_filesystem() became
a function which did nothing other than call get_filesystem_object().
Now remove set_proper_filesystem() altogether and use
get_filesystem_object() in its place.
Use e2image features added in e2fsprogs 1.42.9 to move/copy
an ext[234] file system more efficiently by skipping unused blocks.
Fall back to the internal copy algorithm if e2image is not found
or does not support move/copy.
Bug #721516 - Use e2image to move/copy ext[234] filesystems
Only recognises partitions containing BitLocker Disk Encryption content.
No other actions are supported.
Bug #723232 - BitLocker Disk Encryption not recognised
Restore the order of the source files so that they are once again
compiled in order A-Z, a-z. Order is obtained with:
fgrep .cc src/Makefile.am | LANG=C sort
fgrep .h include/Makefile.am | LANG=C sort
Make the dialog resizable, add a vertical scrollbar and set the minimum
(and therefore initial) height to 500 pixels. This is so that the
dialog entirely fits on an 800x600 screen, thus allowing the rescan
button to be pressed.
100 pixel difference is to account for the size of the top and bottom
GNOME 2 panels and two sets of title bars. Two sets of title bars
because the window manager tries to place the top of dialog title bars
in line with the bottom of the main window title bar.
Bug #342682 - too much information in 'features' dialog
Make the legend always shown, ready for when the dialog is resizable.
Change the widget containing the legend from an expander to a frame
widget. Set the frame to be borderless using a bold label as
recommended in the GNOME Human Interface Guidelines 2.2.1 / Controls /
Frames and Separators.
https://developer.gnome.org/hig-book/2.32/controls-frames.html.en
Bug #342682 - too much information in 'features' dialog
This is part of parent bug:
Bug #721455 - Obsolete info in license text on multiple modules
and GNOME Goal:
https://wiki.gnome.org/Initiatives/GnomeGoals/Proposals
* verify all source files to make sure they have a license and a
copyright, and that both are up-to-date
Bug #721565 - License text contains obsolete FSF postal address
In the Create Partition Table dialog display the entries in the combobox
in order.
Previously the default of MSDOS or GPT was moved to the first item in
the combobox. Now the partition table types remain in order with just
either MSDOS or GPT being selected as as the default as required.
The partition table types are displayed in the order supplied by
libparted, which is alphabetic except with "loop" last.
Bug #711098 - Default partition table can not handle > 2 TiB disks
MSDOS partition table is limited to addressing 2^32 sectors, limiting
disks using 512 byte sectors to 2 TiB in size. Fdisk reports the
following warning on disks 2 TiB and larger.
# truncate -s 2T /var/tmp/loop-2T
# losetup /dev/loop0 /var/tmp/loop-2T
# fdisk /dev/loop0
WARNING: The size of this disk is 2.2 TB (2199023255552 bytes).
DOS partition table format can not be used on drives for volumes
larger than (2199023255040 bytes) for 512-byte sectors. Use parted(1) and GUID
partition table format (GPT).
(Fdisk arguably reports this warning one sector too early. Anyway for
safety and consistency GParted will use this limit too). Continue to
use MSDOS as the default partition table type for disks smaller than 2
TiB and use GPT as the default for disks 2 TiB and larger. This
maximises compatibility.
Also remove the advanced expander and always show the partition table
list box.
Bug #711098 - Default partition table can not handle > 2 TiB disks
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
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
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
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
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"
Dosfstools >= 3.0.18, released June 2013, renamed the programs thus:
dosfslabel becomes fatlabel,
dosfsck becomes fsck.fat,
and mkdosfs becomes mkfs.fat.
Dosfstools creates symbolic links for the old names for backward
compatibility, but unfortunately the Debian dosfstools-3.0.22-1
(experimental) package doesn't include those symbolic links. This
causes create, check and read unmounted FAT16/32 file systems to not be
supported.
Make GParted look for the new names first and the old names second.
Closes Bug #704629 - Program name changes in dosfstools 3.0.18+ break
FAT16/32 support
It was difficult to retrieve whether a filesystem's label can be set on reformat.
The read_label flag can't be used as it decides whether to use the logic in the filesystem class
rather than the fallback in GParted::set_device_partitions, to determine the label of a partition.
The create_with_label flag is NONE for file systems that we cannot format with a
label (or that we cannot format at all).
The value is usually EXTERNAL for file systems that we can format with a label.
The read-only functionality is unused and the readonly parameter is
always false in copy_filesystem() and copy_blocks() methods. This has
been the case since the copy simulation was dropped by commit:
b9b4b2e55d
Remove simulation pass ( read test ) on move
Include guards need to be unique within GParted code and all included
library header files.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Include_guard#Difficulties
Use this model for all include guards:
#ifndef GPARTED_FILE_NAME_H
#define GPARTED_FILE_NAME_H
...
#endif /* GPARTED_FILE_NAME_H */
Closes Bug #539297 - Make include guards unique
It was possible to make GParted crash by adding a label, check or new
UUID operation and then applying the operation before the view of
pending operations had finished fully opening. The operation would be
successfully applied but GParted would crash afterwards.
The fault was that Add_Operation() still enabled the Undo and Apply
buttons and processed the GTK event loop before merging the list of
pending operations. Faulty code flow went like this:
activate_*()
Add_Operation()
Add operation to the operations[] vector
Enable Undo and Apply buttons
Refresh_Visual()
Process GTK event loop
Process Apply button callback applying operations,
refreshing display and clearing operations[] vector
Merge operations in the operations[] vector
<< Core dump here >>
Merge_Operations()
Refresh_Visual()
This faulty code flow came about when merging of operations was added
and it didn't appreciate that the operations[] vector could have been
processed and cleared by Add_Operations() before the merge step.
Relevant commit:
b10349ae37
Merge overlapping operations (#438573)
Fragment of code in the label operation case:
2454 void Win_GParted::activate_label_partition()
2455 {
...
2472 Add_Operation( operation ) ;
2473
2474 // Verify if the two operations can be merged
2475 for ( unsigned int t = 0 ; t < operations .size() - 1 ; t++ )
2476 {
2477 if ( operations[ t ] ->type == OPERATION_LABEL_PARTITION )
2478 {
2479 if ( Merge_Operations( t, operations .size() - 1 ) )
2480 break;
2481 }
2482 }
Commentary in the crashing label operation case:
2472 The pending operation was already applied when Add_Operation()
returned resulting in the operations[] vector being cleared
setting its size to 0.
2475 The return type of operations.size() is an unsigned integral, so
the upper limit of the for loop is t < 0UL - 1. Assuming a
32-bit machine that's t < 4294967295.
2477 operations[] vector is access from out of bounds offset 0
upwards until unallocated memory is accessed resulting in a core
dump.
Fix this by not enabling the Undo and Apply buttons and processing the
GTK event loop until after merging of operations has been performed.
Fixed code flow goes like this:
activate_*()
Add_Operation()
Add operation to the operations[] vector
Merge operations in the operations[] vector
Merge_Operations()
show_operationslist()
Enable Undo and Apply buttons
Refresh_Visual()
Process GTK event loop
Process Apply button callback applying operations,
refreshing display and clearing operations[] vector
Not allowing the operations list to be process until after the merge
step is the be correct ordering. This also prevents the new operation
from flashing up in the operations list and then immediately
disappearing if merged. In the case of adding the first operation,
delaying enabling the Undo and Apply buttons is enough as the buttons
were previously disabled preventing the operation being applied before
the merge. In the case of adding further operations, processing of the
GTK event loop must also be delayed until after the merge to prevent the
operations being applied before the merge. Although that window of
opportunity would only be microseconds.
Bug #699452 - Crash when applying operations before pending operations
fully displayed
Mlabel sometimes writes uninitialised memory at the end of the label.
This causes mlabel, and therefore GParted, to display extra junk at the
end of the label. Depending on the bytes written GParted may also show
the following error on stdout:
(gpartedbin:18116): glibmm-CRITICAL **:
unhandled exception (type Glib::Error) in signal handler:
domain: g_convert_error
code : 1
what : Invalid byte sequence in conversion input
This is caused by a bug in mlabel, believed fixed in mtools 4.0.14.
Effects at least Fedora 14, RHEL/CentOS 6.x and Debian 6. (Use label
"1234567890" on Debian 6 to reproduce). Reproduction steps:
# mkdosfs -F16 /dev/sda7
mkdosfs 3.0.9 (31 Jan 2010)
# export MTOOLS_SKIP_CHECK=1
# mlabel ::123456 -i /dev/sda7
# mlabel -s :: -i /dev/sda7
Volume label is 123456~1t
It is not possible to detect which characters are junk so they can't be
trimmed. Instead just space pad labels so that at least newly written
labels aren't effected. (Fat labels are space padded on the disk by
definition anyway).
Bug #700228 - FAT16/32 labels are sometimes shown corrupted
There was virtually no difference between the separate modules for fat16
and fat32. Remove module fat32 and patch fat16 to serve both file
system subtypes. This is equivalent to what was previously done for
ext[234] by commit:
38dc55d49c
Combine duplicate code for ext[234]
Rename the libsigc++ signals to signal_update and signal_eof to match
the naming used for signals in GParted.
fgrep 'sigc::signal' include/*.h
Also explicitly use the emit() method rather than using the object
operator(). This again is to match the convention in GParted and make
it more obvious what is happening.
fgrep '.emit(' include/*.h
The previous commit missed one glibmm GSource wrapper in the form of the
io watch for the PipeCapture class. Convert this one to use glib
directly as well.
Bug #697727 - Segfault in livecd Gparted v 0.15.0-3 when copying
partition
The glibmm GSource wrappers have a bug where they do not do
reference counting properly, and have a race condition where
the background thread can try to touch the source after the
main thread has already processed and destroyed it. This
results in writes to freed memory and sometimes this causes
crashes or other erratic behavior. Avoid using the glibmm
wrappers and use glib directly. See bug #561885 for details
of the glibmm bug.
Bug #697727 - Segfault in livecd Gparted v 0.15.0-3 when copying partition
These functions in GParted_Core:
open_device()
open_device_and_disk()
close_disk()
close_device_and_disk()
call the following functions in the libparted API:
ped_device_get()
ped_disk_new()
ped_disk_destroy()
ped_device_destroy()
which don't open or close anything. Instead they allocate and
deallocate PedDevice and PedDisk memory structures which describe block
devices and partition tables respectively.
Rename functions:
open_device_and_disk() -> get_device_and_disk()
close_device_and_disk() -> destroy_device_and_disk()
and merge open_device() and open_device() as each only wrapped one
libparted function and was only called from a single place.
The wipefs command has the following significant limitations which were
worked around in previous commits:
1) Wasn't available in the earliest distributions supported by GParted;
2) Had to be called 3 times to erase vfat (fat16/32) signatures in all
but the most recent versions.
This meant we had all the code to clear file system signatures without
using the wipefs command as well as extra complexity of using wipefs
too. So just remove use of the wipefs command.
Bug #688882 - Improve clearing of file system signatures
Before util-linux 2.21.0, released Feb 2012, wipefs only cleared one of
the three vfat (fat16/fat32) signatures it can be detected by each time
wipefs was run. Also if a nilfs2 file system was created before all
three signatures were cleared the partition was still recognised as a
vfat file system, albeit a corrupted one, rather than as a nilfs2 file
system.
Old wipefs clearing vfat signatures:
# wipefs --version
wipefs from util-linux 2.20.1
# wipefs -a /dev/sda7
8 bytes were erased at offset 0x52 (vfat)
they were: 46 41 54 33 32 20 20 20
# wipefs -a /dev/sda7
1 bytes were erased at offset 0x0 (vfat)
they were: eb
# wipefs -a /dev/sda7
2 bytes were erased at offset 0x1fe (vfat)
they were: 55 aa
New wipefs clearing vfat signatures:
# wipefs --version
wipefs from util-linux 2.21.2
# wipefs -a /dev/sda12
8 bytes were erased at offset 0x00000052 (vfat): 46 41 54 33 32 20 20 20
1 bytes were erased at offset 0x00000000 (vfat): eb
2 bytes were erased at offset 0x000001fe (vfat): 55 aa
Workaround by calling "wipefs -a" three times if the output indicated
only one vfat signature was cleared.
Bug #688882 - Improve clearing of file system signatures
Add "cleared" to the bottom of list of file system formats available in
the Create new Partition dialog and in the Format to --> (file system
list) menu. This clears existing file system signatures in the newly
created partitions and existing partitions respectively.
Bug #688882 - Improve clearing of file system signatures
Move some code into new create_format_menu_add_item() sub-function which
adds one file system entry to the Partition --> Format to -->
(file system list) menu.
Bug #688882 - Improve clearing of file system signatures
Previously the function erase_filesystem_signatures() was used to clear
file system signatures when a new partition was created and when an
existing partition was formatted with a file system. However this was
only available with libparted <= 2.4 and then only for the file systems
which libparted supports.
Having multiple different file system signatures on a partition leads to
misidentification of file system. For example creating a nilfs2 over
the top of a fat32 file system is detected as a fat32, not nilfs2. This
shows that old file system signatures must be cleared before a new file
system is created.
Fix by always using "wipefs -a /dev/PARTITION" command to clear all old
file system signatures rather than libparted API calls. Failure from
wipefs is only considered a warning so doesn't fail the file system
creation. (This doesn't yet fully meet the "MUST be cleared"
requirement above. Will be fully met later in this patchset). Output
from the wipefs command is displayed as a new sub-step which looks like
this:
v Format /dev/sda7 as xfs 00:00:05
> calibrate /dev/sda14 00:00:01
v clear old file system signatures in /dev/sda7 00:00:01 [NEW]
> wipefs -a /dev/sda7 [NEW]
> set partition type on /dev/sda7 00:00:02
v create new xfs file system 00:00:01
> mkfs.xfs -f -L "" /dev/sda7
Also signatures are only cleared immediately before a new file system is
written and not when an unformatted partition is created. This allows
recovery from accidental partition deletion by re-creating the deleted
partition as unformatted.
Bug #688882 - Improve clearing of file system signatures
Only supports detection and creation of f2fs file systems. Requires
f2fs-tools and a blkid with f2fs support, util-linux > 2.22.2.
f2fs-tools v1.1.0 only supports file system creation.
Currently requires util-linux directly from the git repository as f2fs
support was only committed on 5 Feb 2013 and it has not yet been
released.
Closes Bug #695396 - Please apply f2fs patch
Many filesystems do not implement some of their methods, but had to provide
dummy implementations. Remove all of the dummy implementations and instead
just provide one in the base FileSystem class.
The details view refused to use additional space, even after the window was
expanded, instead continuing to use the scrollbars. Now resizing the
window will be allowed regardless of the state of the details expander, and
the details view will expand to use the extra space. Also request enough
initial width to not need a horizontal scrollbar.
Closes:
Bug 602635 - list of tasks in apply dialog does not expand to the available
vertical space
Bug 662722 - Increase default width of "applying..." dialog to include the
"Details" status icons
There were separate modules for ext3 and ext4 even though there
were virtually no differences with ext2. Remove the duplicate
modules and patch ext2 to serve as a common reference for all
three sub types.
Interested operations can now connect a signal to their OperationDetail
to be notified of a cancelation request. The internal copy/move code
will now cleanly stop on cancelation, allowing the partition to be
rolled back to its previous state. This makes canceling a move
perfectly safe.
After clicking cancel, the button changes to "Force Cancel" and is
disabled for 5 seconds. Operations that are safe to cancel will do so
and those that are not will continue to run. Clicking force cancel
asks operations to cancel, even if doing so is unsafe. For the
internal copy/move algorithm, canceling is always safe because an
error results in a rollback operation. Canceling the rollback is
unsafe. For external commands, filesystem modules may indicate
that the command is safe to cancel or not. Canceled commands will
be terminated with SIGINT.
As a result of the new safe cancel vs force cancel distinction, the
scary warning about cancl causing corruption has been moved to
after clicking the force cancel button.
Part of Bug #601239 - Please allow 'Cancel after current operation'
Have the copy code create a background thread to do the actual copying so
that it won't block the main loop.
Part of Bug 685740 - Refactor to use asynchronous command execution
Win_Gparted and Dialog_Progress were creating threads to perform most
functions in the background. Most of the time, the only reason the
threads blocked was to execute an external command. The external command
execution has been changed to spawn the command asynchronously and wait
for completion with a nested main loop. While waiting for completion,
the pipe output is captured via events. In the future, this will allow
for it to be parsed in real time to obtain progress information.
Those tasks in GParted_Core that still block now spawn a background thread
and wait for it to complete with a nested main loop to avoid hanging the
gui.
Part of Bug #685740 - Refactor to use asynchronous command execution
Dialog_Progress was using pthread_create() so that it could later
pthread_cancel() the thread. pthread_cancel() is wildly unsafe and full
of errors. Changed to use Glib's threads like the rest, and only cancel
between operations. Because it can take some time to cancel, disable
the cancel button once it has been clicked once.
Bug 601239 - Please allow 'Cancel after current operation'
Win_Gparted and Dialog_Progress were looping on Gtk::Main::events_pending()
and iteration() with usleeps in between. Use a full mainloop instead and
a proper timeout to trigger pulsebar updates instead of usleeps.
Part of Bug 685740 - Refactor to use asynchronous command execution
No longer need to trim fat16, fat32 and xfs labels as all labels are
limited to their maximum lengths during entry.
Bug #689318 - filesystem type specific support for partition name
maximum length
Active Linux software RAID devices are detected in the
Proc_Partitions_Info method. Hence the SWRaid method is no longer
required.
Removal of the SWRaid method fixes the problem with the error message:
Could not stat device /dev/md/0 - No such file or directory
This fixes the problem because we no longer use "mdadm --examine
--scan" in an attempt to detect Linux software RAID devices. The
mdadm command was returning device names such as /dev/md/0, which are
incorrect for GParted.
NOTE: With this change, GParted no longer requires the mdadm command
to detect Linux software RAID devices.
Closes Bug #678379 - Could not stat device /dev/md/0 - No such file or
directory
They were used like global variables. Now they are moved to the
functions that actually use them to make clearer how the data flow is.
Bug #683149 - Cleanup(?): Remove lp_device and lp_disk from GParted_Core
GParted doesn't notice when a file system label is changed to blank.
GParted first calls the file system specific read_label() method. When
the label is blank read_label() correctly sets partition.label to the
zero length string. Second GParted_Core::set_device_partitions() treats
the zero length string to mean that the label is unset and calls
FS_Info::get_label() to retrieve it from the cache of blkid output.
Blkid also doesn't notice when the file system label has been changed to
blank so reports the previous label. Hence GParted displays the
previous file system label.
Fix by making label a private member variable of the class Partition and
providing access methods set_label(), get_label() and label_known()
which track whether the label has been set or not. This only fixes the
fault for file systems which use file system specific commands to read
the label and when these tools are installed. Otherwise GParted uses,
or has to fall back on using, the buggy blkid command to read the file
system label.
NOTE:
Many of the file system specific read_label() methods use a tool which
outputs more than just the label and use Utils::regexp_label() to match
leading text and the label itself. If the surrounding text changes or
disappears altogether to indicated a blank label, regexp_label() doesn't
match anything and returns the zero length string. This is exactly
what is required and is passed to set_label() to set the label to blank.
Bug 685656 - GParted doesn't notice when file system label is changed to
blank
A user had a 190 MiB partition containing an old ext2 file system. When
unmounted it was reported as filling the partition, but when mounted it
was reported as having 6% unallocated space. The file system's inode
tables were approximately twice the size of those created by default
with the current mkfs.ext2 defaults.
To create an equivalent file system in a 190 MiB partition:
mkfs.ext2 -N 97344 /dev/sda15
It turns out that for ext2, ext3 and ext4 file systems what was
described as intrinsic unallocated space during the development of
Bug #499202 is actually file system overhead. When mounted the ext2/3/4
kernel code reports the size of the file system after subtracting the
overhead. Overhead is made up of superblock backups, group descriptors,
allocation bitmaps and largest of all inode tables. E2fsprogs tools
don't subtract this overhead when reporting the file system size.
References:
* The Second Extended File System, Internal Layout, by Dave Poirier
http://www.nongnu.org/ext2-doc/ext2.html
* Linux ext2_statfs() function
http://lxr.linux.no/#linux+v3.5.3/fs/ext2/super.c#L1311
Call the file system specific method for reading the usage of ext2, ext3
and ext4 file systems while mounted. Make it read the file system size
from the on disk superblock to avoid subtraction of overhead and use the
statvfs() system call to return an up to date free space figure.
Bug #683255 - ext2: statvfs differs from dumpe2fs (x MB unallocated
space within the partition)
Each file system class can now choose how the size and free space of the
file system is determined when it is mounted.
.fs.online_read = FS::NONE (default)
Do nothing. Don't get the file system size and free space.
.fs.online_read = FS::GPARTED
Use internal GParted method which calls statvfs() system call on
the mounted file system.
.fs.online_read = FS::EXTERNAL
Call the file system's member function set_used_sectors(). This
is the same function as called when the file system is not
mounted. It can determine if the file system is mounted or not
by testing partition.busy and acting accordingly.
This means that determining the size and free space of active LVM2
Physical Volumes is no longer a special case. Instead the lvm2_pv class
just elects to have its set_used_sectors() method called for both the
active and deactive cases.
Bug #683255 - ext2: statvfs differs from dumpe2fs (x MB unallocated
space within the partition)
On Fedora up to and including Fedora 16 and Red Hat and CentOS up to the
current 6.3 release the UUID of an unmounted reiserfs file system is
displayed as "<no" and a GTK markup warning is written to the terminal.
This was because the reiserfs-utils package isn't linked with libuuid
support so reiserfs file systems were created with a Nil UUID (all
zeros). To read the UUID GParted first tries to retrieve the UUID from
the blkid command output via the FS_Info cache. Secondly it tries the
reiserfs file system specific read_uuid() method which uses the first
space separated word following the text "UUID:", hence it gets "<no".
# debugreiserfs /dev/sda15 2> /dev/null | grep UUID
UUID: <no libuuid installed>
In September 2012 Red Hat bug 660285 "reiserfstune compiled without UUID
support" was fixed for Fedora 16 and later releases. On Fedora with
this fix applied GParted will display the Nil UUID (all zeros) for a
previously created reiserfs file system rather than suppressing it.
Only accept valid, none Nil UUIDs in the reiserfs file system specific
read_uuid() method.
Bug #684115 - Reiserfs UUID reading issues on Fedora and CentOS
As LVM2 Physical Volumes can't be resized when they are members of
exported Volume Groups add a warning message to explain this fact.
Display the message as a partition specific warning and as additional
text when growing the file system to fill the partition is skipped for
the check operation and when pasting into an existing larger partition.
Bug #670171 - Add LVM PV read-write support
When an inactive LVM2 Volume Group is exported it makes it unknown to
the local system, ready for moving the member Physical Volumes to
another system, where the VG can be imported and used. In this state a
PV can't be resized.
# lvm pvresize /dev/sda10
Volume group Test-VG1 is exported
Unable to read volume group "Test-VG1".
0 physical volume(s) resized / 1 physical volume(s) not resized
# echo $?
5
Fix this by preventing resizing of such a PV. This has been coded in a
generic way using new function filesystem_resize_disallowed() to
determine whether a file system is allowed to be resized or not. For
a file system which can be resized, but is currently not allowed to be
resized, the behaviour is as follows:
1) Pasting into unallocated space is limited to creating a new
partition which is the same size as the copied partition.
2) Resizing the partition is disallowed, only moving the partition is
allowed.
3) Pasting into an existing partition will only copy the file system.
If the destination partition is larger a warning will report that
growing the file system is not currently allowed.
4) Checking a partition will also report a warning that growing the
file system is not currently allowed.
This is exactly the same behaviour as for a file system which does not
implement resizing, except for a different warning message.
Bug #670171 - Add LVM PV read-write support
Create common cache search and index functions get_attr_by_name() and
get_attr_by_row() as the existing ones, get_pv_attr_by_*() and
get_vg_attr_by_*(), only differ from each other by the string vector
they use.
If an LVM2 Volume Group has two or more missing Physical Volumes, the VG
is displayed as only having one "unknown device" because
get_vg_members() only adds unique names to the list of members.
# lvm pvcreate /dev/sda11 /dev/sda12 /dev/sda13
# lvm vgcreate Test-VG1 /dev/sda11 /dev/sda12 /dev/sda13
# wipefs -a /dev/sda12
# wipefs -a /dev/sda13
View partition information in GParted
The simplest fix would be to include the PV's UUID in the cache of LVM2
information and add PV names based on unique UUIDs being a member of the
relevant VG. Unfortunately "lvm pvs" seems to have a bug when
displaying Logical Volume attributes, and there are two or more missing
PVs, which causes one of the PVs to be displayed multiple times, rather
than displaying each PV once.
Without LV attributes, every PV is listed:
# lvm pvs --nosuffix --separator , --units b -o pv_name,pv_uuid,vg_name,vg_attr 2> /dev/null
PV,PV UUID,VG,Attr
/dev/sda11,pJ3R51-AOPP-rKlr-CKCT-nfPS-G5FP-B5Vyjm,Test-VG1,wz-pn-
unknown device,Y72oSm-uBcE-ktZL-OIFA-Q129-Uv1B-x5IsrA,Test-VG1,wz-pn-
unknown device,1ESORF-7wlR-0tnO-fy2z-nOL1-MrnJ-2O5yjK,Test-VG1,wz-pn-
With LV attributes, one missing PV is repeated:
# lvm pvs --nosuffix --separator , --units b -o pv_name,pv_uuid,vg_name,vg_attr,lv_name,lv_attr 2> /dev/null
PV,PV UUID,VG,Attr,LV,Attr
/dev/sda11,pJ3R51-AOPP-rKlr-CKCT-nfPS-G5FP-B5Vyjm,Test-VG1,wz-pn-,,
unknown device,Y72oSm-uBcE-ktZL-OIFA-Q129-Uv1B-x5IsrA,Test-VG1,wz-pn-,,
unknown device,Y72oSm-uBcE-ktZL-OIFA-Q129-Uv1B-x5IsrA,Test-VG1,wz-pn-,,
Also "lvm vgs" and "lvm lvs" don't display anything when including both
VG and LV attributes.
Instead query the LVM2 information in two separate commands, one
querying PV attributes and one querying VG and LV attributes, saving the
results in lvm_pv_cache and lvm_vg_cache respectively.
Bug #670171 - Add LVM PV read-write support
Add const qualifier to get_pv_attr_by_path() and get_pv_attr_by_row() as
they only access member variables read-only.
Make lvm2_pv_attr_to_num() a static member function as it doesn't access
any member variables.
Rename functions and a variable to use a generic term for the menu item
which changes the busy state of partitions now that it also activates
and deactivates LVM2 Physical Volumes as well as mounting and unmounting
file systems and enables and disables swap partitions.
When attempting to delete a non-empty LVM2 Physical Volume (one which is
still a member of a Volume Group) display a warning dialog which
includes the VG name and a list of the PV members to allow the user to
make an informed choice whether to go ahead and perform the deletion or
cancel to the operation. This dialog is displayed when a partition
containing a PV is being deleted or being overwritten by being
reformatted or pasted into.
Bug #670171 - Add LVM PV read-write support
This commit only adds a remove() method to every file system and an
optional call to it in the relevant operations. All remove() methods
are no operations and not enabled.
The remove() method provides explicit controlled removal of a file
system before the partition is deleted or overwritten by being formatted
or pasted into. When implemented, it appears as an extra step in the
relevant operation. The file system specific remove() method is
explicitly allowed to fail and stop the operations currently being
applied.
This is different to the existing erase_filesystem_signatures() which
wipes any previous file system signatures immediately before a new file
system is written to ensure there is no possibility of the partition
containing two or more different file system signatures. It never fails
or reports anything to the user.
NOTE:
Most file systems should NOT implement a remove() method as it will
prevent recovery from accidental partition deletion.
Bug #670171 - Add LVM PV read-write support