Public bug reported: Binary package hint: gvfs
I have a dual boot machine that runs Windows XP and Ubuntu 10.04 LTS. I have my NTFS partitions in the fstab so they mount themselves automatically. I don't know exact steps to reproduce but it sometimes happen. I just moved some pictures to my NTFS partition from my camera on Ubuntu then I restarted my machine to boot in Windows to process that files (also many programs on my XP updated themselves). After I finished my work I switched back to Ubuntu and I downloaded a ZIP and wanted to extract it. It had a lot of files. Extraction result in a lots of I/O errors. I took a look at the place I tried to extract the files and I saw something weird. Some of my music files appeared in that directory but with a different filename. I was able to play them but I was unable to delete them (no such file error or I/O errors, corrupted file descriptors?). Then I switched back to my Windows partition and ran "chkdsk -f" to repair the partition, it spotted the problem and deleted all corrupt file descriptors (all the pictures I just moved). After that, everything worked fine (and those wierd "links" to my music files also gone away). Since I moved the pictures from my camera and chkdsk deleted them they are lost permanently. There was a similar issue a month ago, when I "lost" all my music files. I had a directory where I store all my music files but nautilus showed the directory as empty however I was able play any music if know its exact file name and typed its exact path in my music player. I switched to Windows and ran "chkdsk" an it restored the file descriptors. Under windows I used to pull out my pen drive immediately after I copied the files on it without properly shutting it down. I have never had problems about this on that system but not in Ubuntu. Under Ubuntu if you do the same without umount you will lost or corrupt all the files you copied. If you always umount there is no problem (you see the pen drive led flashing maybe it closing the file descriptors and commit the changes that time?). Maybe a similar thing happens with the NTFS partitions if I shut down or restart my system just after I copied some files on my NTFS partition. Maybe the filesystem manager forget to commit? ProblemType: Bug DistroRelease: Ubuntu 10.04 Package: gvfs 1.6.1-0ubuntu1build1 ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 2.6.32-21.32-generic 2.6.32.11+drm33.2 Uname: Linux 2.6.32-21-generic i686 Architecture: i386 Date: Mon Oct 18 18:38:28 2010 InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 10.04 LTS "Lucid Lynx" - Release i386 (20100429) ProcEnviron: LANG=hu_HU.UTF-8 SHELL=/bin/bash SourcePackage: gvfs ** Affects: gvfs (Ubuntu) Importance: Undecided Status: New ** Tags: apport-bug i386 lucid -- Gvfs may corrupt NTFS partitions https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/662816 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Desktop Bugs, which is subscribed to gvfs in ubuntu. -- desktop-bugs mailing list desktop-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/desktop-bugs