** Description changed:

  Running lsblk, blkid, and fdisf-l results in long lists of output as
  every installed snap loop is listed, 2-3 times each. A new and default
  Ubuntu 18.04 installation alone (without manually installing any snaps)
  outputs 16 snaps for lsblk, and the list grows with each additional snap
  installed. The results of fdisk -l are several pages long because of
  these snaps, creating a lot of unwanted clutter when seeking drive
  device information.
  
  Meanwhile, gnome-disk-utility shows nothing at all for snaps, only
  showing my HDD, USB flash drives, and optical drive, the desired output.
  
  Parted -l also functions as desired, only listing the relevant drive
  partitions.
  
+ So, the unwanted effect of this bug is the listing of every snap loop as
+ output for lsblk, blkid, and fdisk -l. The desired effect is not to list
+ any snap loops for these commands, perhaps allowing 3 core loops
+ maximum.
+ 
  
  Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
  
  snap:
-   Installed: (none)
-   Candidate: 2013-11-29-8
-   Version table:
-      2013-11-29-8 500
-         500 http://ca.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/universe amd64 Packages
+   Installed: (none)
+   Candidate: 2013-11-29-8
+   Version table:
+      2013-11-29-8 500
+         500 http://ca.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/universe amd64 Packages

** Description changed:

  Running lsblk, blkid, and fdisf-l results in long lists of output as
  every installed snap loop is listed, 2-3 times each. A new and default
  Ubuntu 18.04 installation alone (without manually installing any snaps)
  outputs 16 snaps for lsblk, and the list grows with each additional snap
  installed. The results of fdisk -l are several pages long because of
  these snaps, creating a lot of unwanted clutter when seeking drive
  device information.
  
  Meanwhile, gnome-disk-utility shows nothing at all for snaps, only
  showing my HDD, USB flash drives, and optical drive, the desired output.
  
  Parted -l also functions as desired, only listing the relevant drive
  partitions.
  
  So, the unwanted effect of this bug is the listing of every snap loop as
  output for lsblk, blkid, and fdisk -l. The desired effect is not to list
- any snap loops for these commands, perhaps allowing 3 core loops
- maximum.
- 
+ any snap loops at all for these commands, or perhaps allowing at maximum
+ 3 core loops as output.
  
  Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
  
  snap:
    Installed: (none)
    Candidate: 2013-11-29-8
    Version table:
       2013-11-29-8 500
          500 http://ca.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu bionic/universe amd64 Packages

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1778375

Title:
  All snap loops are being output for lsblk, blkid, and fdisk -l.

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