[Expired for gparted (Ubuntu) because there has been no activity for 60
days.]
** Changed in: gparted (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete = Expired
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/601859
surely logic dictates;
windows partition/formatting creates a filesystem to the correct standard,
grub4dos is happy with this.
dmraid/gparted/ntfs-3g/mkfs.ntfs creates a filesystem that isnt the same in
some way, if grub4dos doesn't like it.
if windows and ubuntu is happy with the latter it
On 9/28/2010 4:52 AM, chud wrote:
surely logic dictates; windows partition/formatting creates a
filesystem to the correct standard, grub4dos is happy with this.
dmraid/gparted/ntfs-3g/mkfs.ntfs creates a filesystem that isnt the
same in some way, if grub4dos doesn't like it.
if windows and
** Changed in: gparted (Ubuntu)
Status: New = Incomplete
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gparted with dmraid causes incorrect NTFS formatting via mkfs.ntfs
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/601859
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If both Ubuntu and Windows recognize the volume correctly, and it is
only grub that does not, then the bug lies in grub. Just to make sure,
can you try running a chkdsk /f on the volume from windows and then see
if grub still does not recognize it.
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gparted with dmraid causes incorrect NTFS
Hi,
I dug out an old SiL (3112?)PCI RAID adapter last night, hooked both
drives up as before, created a new raid set - booted into Ubuntu 10.04
live
I used fdisk and mkfs.ntfs manually and got the exact same problem as on
the Intel controller, the NTFS filesystem is being created oddly and
If you reformat in gparted does it then become NTFS?
This is what I found.
Could you try it on a non dmraided drive as well?
Most people will only use NTFS in linux with premade partitions when dual
booting so its possibly a bug between gparted and ntfs-3g.
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gparted with dmraid causes