Den 2016-09-02 kl. 18:21, skrev Alberto Salvia Novella: > Because most inexpensive modern USB drives will be able to handle that > amount of space without problems, I believe changing the default upgrade > method would be a drawback. > > For example a Kingston 32GB USB 3.0 drive costs as little as 8€, and a > Sandisk 8GB USB 2.0 drive costs 3€. The official Ubuntu USB drive has > 32GB and costs 6£. > > Upgrading automatically is a better default for at least 95% of > situations, and the person could still easily realise that they should > disable automatic upgrades when having a small vintage USB drive. > Moreover the Startup Disk Creator no longer has persistence, so the > likelihood of a novel user making that mistake is minimum. > > For the moment I will consider this report as an opinion, but feel free > to bring the conversation to the Quality mailing list at > (https://launchpad.net/~ubuntu-testing). Thanks for your always welcomed > help and understanding. > > ** Changed in: casper (Ubuntu) > Status: Confirmed => Opinion > > ** Changed in: casper (Ubuntu) > Importance: Undecided => Wishlist >
Hi Alberto, I see your point, but there is definitely a problem in this case, a problem big enough to report a bug. 1. Several tools for persistence are still creating a casper-rw file in a FAT32 file system. This will limit the size of the file and the loop-mounted filesystem inside it to 4 GB, which is definitely not enough, if you allow unattended upgrading. 2. mkusb is different, it creates a partition for persistence, but I am sure that many people want to use 4 GB or 8 GB pendrives, and there is definitely a space problem also in these cases. 3. But maybe the most severe reason to avoid excessive upgrading is that persistent live systems are much more sensitive than normal installed systems. It is well known to people who use persistent live systems, that you should keep the amount of upgrading to a minimum. The kernel and certain other parts of the system cannot be upgraded, because the kernel from the live system is started before the overlay structure is created from the casper-rw file or partition. Some upgrades that will be used imply that the new kernel etc are used, but that is not possible, so the system fails to work. As it is now, the kernel is upgraded (but not used). -o- I have discussed this issue with two very knowledgeable persons with own experience of persistent live systems, and we agree: Changing the default setting of updating program packages (as what happened from Ubuntu 14.04 LTS to 16.04 LTS) creates problems for persistent live systems - problems that are severe enough to say it is a bug. Many disappointed users will probably leave Ubuntu silently and select some other distro after a system crash because of this bug. -o- Please notice that I want to keep the general settings of the updating system [of installed systems], and only suggest changing the settings, when running live and persistent live. This is why the bug is directed against casper. Best regards Nio -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1619188 Title: Unattended upgrades can break persistent live media To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/casper/+bug/1619188/+subscriptions -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs
