As Colin Watson pointed out way back in 2014, when I removed the
512 byte sector size restriction from the fs recognition code,
I missed the same from the fat resize code.
---
 NEWS                            |  2 ++
 libparted/fs/r/fat/bootsector.c | 12 ------------
 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-)

diff --git a/NEWS b/NEWS
index 5bc3051..a2e077a 100644
--- a/NEWS
+++ b/NEWS
@@ -37,6 +37,8 @@ GNU parted NEWS                                    -*- 
outline -*-
 
 ** New Features
 
+  libparted-fs-resize: Work on non 512 byte sectors.
+
   Add resizepart command to resize a partition.  This works even on
   mounted partitions.
 
diff --git a/libparted/fs/r/fat/bootsector.c b/libparted/fs/r/fat/bootsector.c
index 99d788d..3e34e13 100644
--- a/libparted/fs/r/fat/bootsector.c
+++ b/libparted/fs/r/fat/bootsector.c
@@ -125,18 +125,6 @@ fat_boot_sector_analyse (FatBootSector* bs, PedFileSystem* 
fs)
 
        PED_ASSERT (bs != NULL);
 
-       if (PED_LE16_TO_CPU (bs->sector_size) != 512) {
-               if (ped_exception_throw (
-                       PED_EXCEPTION_BUG,
-                       PED_EXCEPTION_IGNORE_CANCEL,
-                       _("This file system has a logical sector size of %d.  "
-                       "GNU Parted is known not to work properly with sector "
-                       "sizes other than 512 bytes."),
-                       (int) PED_LE16_TO_CPU (bs->sector_size))
-                               != PED_EXCEPTION_IGNORE)
-                       return 0;
-       }
-
        fs_info->logical_sector_size = PED_LE16_TO_CPU (bs->sector_size) / 512;
 
        fs_info->sectors_per_track = PED_LE16_TO_CPU (bs->secs_track);
-- 
2.7.4


Reply via email to