Bug#451849: openoffice.org-gnome: wiping out contents of files on shared drives when opening

2007-11-21 Thread Jan Holesovsky
Hi Tim, On Tuesday 20 of November 2007, Tim Richardson wrote: your new packages do not demonstrate the bug. I successfully opened a file; it was not destroyed. Good - now could you please test if the file is correctly saved? - open the file - do a slight modification - save Is it OK after

Bug#451849: openoffice.org-gnome: wiping out contents of files on shared drives when opening

2007-11-21 Thread Tim Richardson
Hi Jan. A small modification works. The file was saved successfully and reopens just fine. By the way, the bug I saw was not that files were zeroed out (ie, they were not filled with zero bytes), but that the file was replaced with a 0 byte length file. On Wed, 2007-11-21 at 10:47 +0100, Jan

Bug#451849: openoffice.org-gnome: wiping out contents of files on shared drives when opening

2007-11-20 Thread Rene Engelhard
Hi, Tim Richardson wrote: Rene Engelhard wrote: 09:55 @kendy_ _rene_: Can you please ask him if the size of the file stays untouched? File size is set to zero bytes Can you try the following packages (which disable the patches we have in ooo-build compared to plain

Bug#451849: openoffice.org-gnome: wiping out contents of files on shared drives when opening

2007-11-20 Thread Tim Richardson
Rene, your new packages do not demonstrate the bug. I successfully opened a file; it was not destroyed. regards Tim On Tue, 2007-11-20 at 11:26 +0100, Rene Engelhard wrote: Hi, Tim Richardson wrote: Rene Engelhard wrote: 09:55 @kendy_ _rene_: Can you please ask him if the size of

Bug#451849: openoffice.org-gnome: wiping out contents of files on shared drives when opening

2007-11-19 Thread Tim Richardson
Rene Engelhard wrote: Hi, Tim Richardson wrote: When opening files on a shared folder (in one case, a Windows share, in another case, a share from another Debian box) the file is zeroed out when the file is opened. Irretrievable data loss. No warning. Something to do with gnome Vfs

Bug#451849: openoffice.org-gnome: wiping out contents of files on shared drives when opening

2007-11-19 Thread Rene Engelhard
forwarded 451849 [EMAIL PROTECTED] thanks Rene Engelhard wrote: Tim Richardson wrote: When opening files on a shared folder (in one case, a Windows share, in another case, a share from another Debian box) the file is zeroed out when the file is opened. Irretrievable data loss. No

Bug#451849: openoffice.org-gnome: wiping out contents of files on shared drives when opening

2007-11-19 Thread Tim Richardson
Rene Engelhard wrote: 09:55 @kendy_ _rene_: Can you please ask him if the size of the file stays untouched? File size is set to zero bytes -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Bug#451849: openoffice.org-gnome: wiping out contents of files on shared drives when opening

2007-11-18 Thread Tim Richardson
Package: openoffice.org-gnome Version: 1:2.3.0.dfsg-2 Severity: grave Justification: causes non-serious data loss When opening files on a shared folder (in one case, a Windows share, in another case, a share from another Debian box) the file is zeroed out when the file is opened. Irretrievable

Bug#451849: openoffice.org-gnome: wiping out contents of files on shared drives when opening

2007-11-18 Thread Rene Engelhard
Hi, Tim Richardson wrote: When opening files on a shared folder (in one case, a Windows share, in another case, a share from another Debian box) the file is zeroed out when the file is opened. Irretrievable data loss. No warning. Something to do with gnome Vfs perhaps. The error occurs in

Bug#451849: openoffice.org-gnome: wiping out contents of files on shared drives when opening

2007-11-18 Thread Tim Richardson
I noticed it in the last few days. 2.3.0.dfsg-1 and -2 came fast after one another, but it would have very likely been one of those. I don't often edit documents on the machine running sid, but I do sometimes and documents getting wiped out is a bug that is quite noticeable. On Sun, 2007-11-18