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Do NOT report bugs when a package is just outdated, or it is in the AUR. Use the 'flag out of date' link on the package page, or the Mailing List.
REPEAT: Do NOT report bugs for outdated packages!
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Bug_reporting_guidelines
Do NOT report bugs when a package is just outdated, or it is in the AUR. Use the 'flag out of date' link on the package page, or the Mailing List.
REPEAT: Do NOT report bugs for outdated packages!
FS#26750 - Accessing Windows partitions after resuming from hibernation corrupts folders.
Attached to Project:
Arch Linux
Opened by Amitav (amitavmohanty01) - Saturday, 05 November 2011, 04:23 GMT
Last edited by Jan de Groot (JGC) - Saturday, 05 November 2011, 21:45 GMT
Opened by Amitav (amitavmohanty01) - Saturday, 05 November 2011, 04:23 GMT
Last edited by Jan de Groot (JGC) - Saturday, 05 November 2011, 21:45 GMT
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DetailsAdditional info:
* package version(s) Windows 7 Linux 3.0 KDE 4.7 Steps to reproduce: 1. Boot into your linux installation of your dual boot. 2. Do your work and hibernate. 3. Boot into your windows installation. Save some files or folders on Windows partitions [fat32 or ntfs does not matter]. 4. Shutdown Windows and boot resume from hibernation in Linux. 5. Try to access the saved files on the Windows partition. Dolphin does not show the folder/file in the directory. 6. Restart linux and you can see the saved files/ | 6. Hibernate back and boot into Windows to check for the folders in Dolphin. | files, and they turn out to be corrupted. |
This task depends upon
Comment by Jan de Groot (JGC) -
Saturday, 05 November 2011, 09:08 GMT
This is totally normal and is not a bug at all. Hibernate is meant to restore the system to exactly the same state as before the hibernation, if you change things on your system between hibernate and resume, that will break. What's next? Reporting a crash because you added/removed memory or changed your video card?
Comment by Amitav (amitavmohanty01) -
Saturday, 05 November 2011, 18:27 GMT
The file manager[Dolphin] was not started when I hibernated. So, when I start the file manager after resuming from hibernation, should it not scan the filesystem and so the current/latest version of the files on the disk.
Comment by Jan de Groot (JGC) -
Saturday, 05 November 2011, 21:45 GMT
The filesystem was mounted, that's enough to get filesystem corruption. NTFS is not designed to be mounted twice at the same time (which is what mounting from another OS while you hibernated actually is). If you want this, use a clustered filesystem that support such things.