gparted crashes when copying ntfs partition
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
gparted (Ubuntu) |
Confirmed
|
Undecided
|
Unassigned |
Bug Description
1) $ lsb_release -rd
Description: Ubuntu 16.04 LTS
Release: 16.04
2) $ apt-cache policy gparted
gparted:
Installed: 0.25.0-1
Candidate: 0.25.0-1
Version table:
*** 0.25.0-1 500
500 http://
100 /var/lib/
3) Copying ntfs partition from one disk to another disk should not crash Gparted.
4) Running sudo gparted from terminal to capture error messages. After the command ntfsclone has completed but before the dialog box indicates success, Gparted crashes with this error.
(gpartedbin:21478): glibmm-ERROR **:
unhandled exception (type std::exception) in signal handler:
what: basic_string:
Trace/breakpoint trap (core dumped)
Checking after the crash, the partition seems to have been successfully copied, despite the crash. Does not crash when copying ext4.
...
UPDATE:
can confirm this also happens in Ubuntu 14.04
1) $ lsb_release -rd
Description: Ubuntu 14.04.4 LTS
Release: 14.04
2) $ apt-cache policy gparted
gparted:
Installed: 0.18.0-1
Candidate: 0.18.0-1
Version table:
*** 0.18.0-1 0
500 http://
100 /var/lib/
...
A series messages like these also appear while gparted is running:
(gpartedbin:4207): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 4198 was not found when attempting to remove it
(gpartedbin:4207): GLib-CRITICAL **: Source ID 4197 was not found when attempting to remove it
...
And then finally after completion of ntfsclone the same error:
(gpartedbin:4207): glibmm-ERROR **:
unhandled exception (type std::exception) in signal handler:
what: basic_string:
description: | updated |
summary: |
- gparted on ubuntu 16.04 crashes after copying ntfs partition + gparted crashes after copying ntfs partition |
summary: |
- gparted crashes after copying ntfs partition + gparted crashes when copying ntfs partition |
description: | updated |
description: | updated |
description: | updated |
Changed in gparted (Ubuntu): | |
status: | New → Incomplete |
Would you be able to provide the output from the following three commands?
sudo fdisk -l -u
where one of the options is a lower case "L" and not the number one.
sudo parted /path-to- your-device unit s print
where /path-to- your-device is something like /dev/sda.
sudo blkid