Public bug reported:

So, I don't fully understand the differences between 'legacy' boot and
'efi/uefi' boot modes, but what I do know is that I had my bios set to
'legacy' boot by default, it seems.

I was running windows 8.1 on my Dell E6530.

I tried to install ubuntu 15.04.

In the boot menu, I had to select to boot off of the USB in UEFI mode.

I tried to create a partition using the install script's tool for doing
so.

I had 80gb out of 240gb free. I tried to reduce the 240gb partition down
to 200gb, and make the remaining 40gb into an ext4 partition.

I initially got a pop up telling me that it seemed my other OS was not a
UEFI installed OS, so I may have trouble with grub or something. I hit
'back', I think, and got some I/O errors. I hit ignore, as several alert
windows popped up notifying me of I/O errors.

I don't remember all the details of what is next. I think I tried to do
it again, and then clicked skip this time, or something, and then got
several I/O errors popping up, one after another.

Finally, I got an alert that install had failed.

When I restarted my computer, it was gone. No ability to boot into
windows.

Go ahead and liveboot into ubuntu, figuring it's just a matter of
restoring the original partitions.

Talk through it with a guy on IRC. Powercycle. He confirms with me that
it isn't a faulty SATA port through a series of steps.

Note that when I do the liveboot, I see the verbose booting read 'ata
error -=16' repeatedly or something... That's the closest I get to
seeing the computer even try to identify it.

A lot of people seem to scoff initially, saying you can't brick a drive
this way. But some bug somewhere caused something. The idea of a random
drive failure at just the moment I started doing a partition seems very
unlikely.

This is an OCZ ARC 100 240gb. I purchased it a few months ago new. It
has served me well and flawlessly until this moment.

And it was $100, and I am very sad to be lacking it.

Luckily, most of my files were kept on an external drive; still, it had
all of my software, and many, many hours of work in its own right.

** Affects: ubuntu
     Importance: Undecided
         Status: New


** Tags: 15.04 harddrive install legacy partition ssd uefi

** Description changed:

  So, I don't fully understand the differences between 'legacy' boot and
  'efi/uefi' boot modes, but what I do know is that I had my bios set to
  'legacy' boot by default, it seems.
  
- I was running windows 8.1
+ I was running windows 8.1 on my Dell E6530.
  
  I tried to install ubuntu 15.04.
  
  In the boot menu, I had to select to boot off of the USB in UEFI mode.
  
  I tried to create a partition using the install script's tool for doing
  so.
  
  I had 80gb out of 240gb free. I tried to reduce the 240gb partition down
  to 200gb, and make the remaining 40gb into an ext4 partition.
  
  I initially got a pop up telling me that it seemed my other OS was not a
  UEFI installed OS, so I may have trouble with grub or something. I hit
  'back', I think, and got some I/O errors. I hit ignore, as several alert
  windows popped up notifying me of I/O errors.
  
  I don't remember all the details of what is next. I think I tried to do
  it again, and then clicked skip this time, or something, and then got
  several I/O errors popping up, one after another.
  
  Finally, I got an alert that install had failed.
  
  When I restarted my computer, it was gone. No ability to boot into
  windows.
  
  Go ahead and liveboot into ubuntu, figuring it's just a matter of
  restoring the original partitions.
  
  Talk through it with a guy on IRC. Powercycle. He confirms with me that
  it isn't a faulty SATA port through a series of steps.
  
  Note that when I do the liveboot, I see the verbose booting read 'ata
  error -=16' repeatedly or something... That's the closest I get to
  seeing the computer even try to identify it.
  
  A lot of people seem to scoff initially, saying you can't brick a drive
  this way. But some bug somewhere caused something. The idea of a random
  drive failure at just the moment I started doing a partition seems very
  unlikely.
  
  This is an OCZ ARC 100 240gb. I purchased it a few months ago new. It
  has served me well and flawlessly until this moment.
  
  And it was $100, and I am very sad to be lacking it.
  
  Luckily, most of my files were kept on an external drive; still, it had
  all of my software, and many, many hours of work in its own right.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1467346

Title:
  Partition tool of 15.04 install script bricked SSD, conflict between
  UEFI/Legacy boot might be a factor...

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