Activity log for bug #1983768

Date Who What changed Old value New value Message
2022-08-07 02:58:02 David Hedlund bug added bug
2022-08-07 03:19:59 David Hedlund description This issue is for gnome-disks, for its Resize function. I've only evaluated this for EXT4 file systems. Works: 1) In a terminal, run $ lsblk 2) Open gnome-disks 3) Select a partition, and click on the "Mount selected" partition button. 4) Click on the "Additional partition options" button, and then on the "Resize..." entry to open the "Resize Volume" window. 5) In the "Resize Volume" window, enlarge the "Current size" and then click on the "Resize" button. 6) In the terminal, run $ lsblk again, and compare the SIZE of the partition with the previously output from lsblk 7) Result: Both the partition and the _file system_ will be enlarged. Does not work: * Run the above steps but skip step 3 (do not mount the partition). * Result: The partition will be enlarged, but not the _file system_ will not be enlarged. Solution: The Resize function should automatically resize the file system, regardless if the partition is mounted or not, like gparted. If it helps, the gparted log says that its using: $ resize2fs -p '/dev/sda2' Package: gnome-disk-utility 3.36.3 This issue is for gnome-disks, for its Resize function. I've only evaluated this for EXT4 file systems. Works: 1) In a terminal, run $ lsblk 2) Open gnome-disks 3) Select a partition, and click on the "Mount selected" partition button. 4) Click on the "Additional partition options" button, and then on the "Resize..." entry to open the "Resize Volume" window. 5) In the "Resize Volume" window, enlarge the "Current size" and then click on the "Resize" button. 6) In the terminal, run $ lsblk again, and compare the SIZE of the partition with the previously output from lsblk 7) Result: Both the partition and the _file system_ will be enlarged. Does not work: * Run the above steps but skip step 3 (do not mount the partition). * Result: The partition will be enlarged, but not the _file system_ will not be enlarged. Solution: The Resize function should automatically resize the file system, regardless if the partition is mounted or not, like gparted. If it helps, the gparted log says that its using: $ resize2fs -p '/dev/sda2'
2022-08-12 17:43:18 David Hedlund tags apport-collected jammy wayland-session
2022-08-12 17:43:19 David Hedlund description Package: gnome-disk-utility 3.36.3 This issue is for gnome-disks, for its Resize function. I've only evaluated this for EXT4 file systems. Works: 1) In a terminal, run $ lsblk 2) Open gnome-disks 3) Select a partition, and click on the "Mount selected" partition button. 4) Click on the "Additional partition options" button, and then on the "Resize..." entry to open the "Resize Volume" window. 5) In the "Resize Volume" window, enlarge the "Current size" and then click on the "Resize" button. 6) In the terminal, run $ lsblk again, and compare the SIZE of the partition with the previously output from lsblk 7) Result: Both the partition and the _file system_ will be enlarged. Does not work: * Run the above steps but skip step 3 (do not mount the partition). * Result: The partition will be enlarged, but not the _file system_ will not be enlarged. Solution: The Resize function should automatically resize the file system, regardless if the partition is mounted or not, like gparted. If it helps, the gparted log says that its using: $ resize2fs -p '/dev/sda2' Package: gnome-disk-utility 3.36.3 This issue is for gnome-disks, for its Resize function. I've only evaluated this for EXT4 file systems. Works: 1) In a terminal, run $ lsblk 2) Open gnome-disks 3) Select a partition, and click on the "Mount selected" partition button. 4) Click on the "Additional partition options" button, and then on the "Resize..." entry to open the "Resize Volume" window. 5) In the "Resize Volume" window, enlarge the "Current size" and then click on the "Resize" button. 6) In the terminal, run $ lsblk again, and compare the SIZE of the partition with the previously output from lsblk 7) Result: Both the partition and the _file system_ will be enlarged. Does not work: * Run the above steps but skip step 3 (do not mount the partition). * Result: The partition will be enlarged, but not the _file system_ will not be enlarged. Solution: The Resize function should automatically resize the file system, regardless if the partition is mounted or not, like gparted. If it helps, the gparted log says that its using: $ resize2fs -p '/dev/sda2' --- ProblemType: Bug ApportVersion: 2.20.11-0ubuntu82.1 Architecture: amd64 CasperMD5CheckResult: pass CurrentDesktop: ubuntu:GNOME DistroRelease: Ubuntu 22.04 InstallationDate: Installed on 2022-08-03 (8 days ago) InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 22.04 LTS "Jammy Jellyfish" - Release amd64 (20220419) Package: gnome-disk-utility 42.0-1ubuntu1 PackageArchitecture: amd64 ProcEnviron: TERM=xterm-256color PATH=(custom, no user) XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=<set> LANG=en_US.UTF-8 SHELL=/bin/bash ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 5.15.0-46.49-generic 5.15.39 Tags: wayland-session jammy Uname: Linux 5.15.0-46-generic x86_64 UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install) UserGroups: adm cdrom dip lpadmin lxd plugdev sambashare sudo _MarkForUpload: True
2022-08-12 17:43:20 David Hedlund attachment added Dependencies.txt https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1983768/+attachment/5608257/+files/Dependencies.txt
2022-08-12 17:43:20 David Hedlund attachment added ProcCpuinfoMinimal.txt https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1983768/+attachment/5608258/+files/ProcCpuinfoMinimal.txt
2022-08-12 17:49:13 David Hedlund description Package: gnome-disk-utility 3.36.3 This issue is for gnome-disks, for its Resize function. I've only evaluated this for EXT4 file systems. Works: 1) In a terminal, run $ lsblk 2) Open gnome-disks 3) Select a partition, and click on the "Mount selected" partition button. 4) Click on the "Additional partition options" button, and then on the "Resize..." entry to open the "Resize Volume" window. 5) In the "Resize Volume" window, enlarge the "Current size" and then click on the "Resize" button. 6) In the terminal, run $ lsblk again, and compare the SIZE of the partition with the previously output from lsblk 7) Result: Both the partition and the _file system_ will be enlarged. Does not work: * Run the above steps but skip step 3 (do not mount the partition). * Result: The partition will be enlarged, but not the _file system_ will not be enlarged. Solution: The Resize function should automatically resize the file system, regardless if the partition is mounted or not, like gparted. If it helps, the gparted log says that its using: $ resize2fs -p '/dev/sda2' --- ProblemType: Bug ApportVersion: 2.20.11-0ubuntu82.1 Architecture: amd64 CasperMD5CheckResult: pass CurrentDesktop: ubuntu:GNOME DistroRelease: Ubuntu 22.04 InstallationDate: Installed on 2022-08-03 (8 days ago) InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 22.04 LTS "Jammy Jellyfish" - Release amd64 (20220419) Package: gnome-disk-utility 42.0-1ubuntu1 PackageArchitecture: amd64 ProcEnviron: TERM=xterm-256color PATH=(custom, no user) XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=<set> LANG=en_US.UTF-8 SHELL=/bin/bash ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 5.15.0-46.49-generic 5.15.39 Tags: wayland-session jammy Uname: Linux 5.15.0-46-generic x86_64 UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install) UserGroups: adm cdrom dip lpadmin lxd plugdev sambashare sudo _MarkForUpload: True This issue is for gnome-disks, for its Resize function. I've only evaluated this for EXT4 file systems. Works: 1) In a terminal, run $ lsblk 2) Open gnome-disks 3) Select a partition, and click on the "Mount selected" partition button. 4) Click on the "Additional partition options" button, and then on the "Resize..." entry to open the "Resize Volume" window. 5) In the "Resize Volume" window, enlarge the "Current size" and then click on the "Resize" button. 6) In the terminal, run $ lsblk again, and compare the SIZE of the partition with the previously output from lsblk 7) Result: Both the partition and the _file system_ will be enlarged. Does not work: * Run the above steps but skip step 3 (do not mount the partition). * Result: The partition will be enlarged, but not the _file system_ will not be enlarged. Solution: The Resize function should automatically resize the file system, regardless if the partition is mounted or not, like gparted. If it helps, the gparted log says that its using: $ resize2fs -p '/dev/sda2' --- ProblemType: Bug ApportVersion: 2.20.11-0ubuntu82.1 Architecture: amd64 CasperMD5CheckResult: pass CurrentDesktop: ubuntu:GNOME DistroRelease: Ubuntu 22.04 InstallationDate: Installed on 2022-08-03 (8 days ago) InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 22.04 LTS "Jammy Jellyfish" - Release amd64 (20220419) Package: gnome-disk-utility 42.0-1ubuntu1 PackageArchitecture: amd64 ProcEnviron:  TERM=xterm-256color  PATH=(custom, no user)  XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=<set>  LANG=en_US.UTF-8  SHELL=/bin/bash ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 5.15.0-46.49-generic 5.15.39 Tags: wayland-session jammy Uname: Linux 5.15.0-46-generic x86_64 UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install) UserGroups: adm cdrom dip lpadmin lxd plugdev sambashare sudo _MarkForUpload: True
2023-05-16 20:37:57 David Hedlund bug watch added https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-disk-utility/-/issues/292
2023-05-16 20:37:57 David Hedlund bug task added gnome-disk-utility
2023-05-16 21:16:54 Bug Watch Updater gnome-disk-utility: status Unknown New