I have already filed Bug 1414809 - problem in F25 shutdown process to Kernel. In my eyes its a major bug. I have just done the same on F24 with another disk - no problem. Also if You don't have a USB-disk, if You compare shutting down in F24 and F25, You should see the -only viewing shut down in F25 desktop version, no logging - lines of code displayed and the the time needed for shutting down, and You can compare this this with the shut down procedure in F24.
Kind regards
-----Ursprüngliche Mitteilung-----
Von: stan <stanl-fedorauser@xxxxxxxxxxx>
An: test <test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Verschickt: Do, 19 Jan 2017 5:52 pm
Betreff: Re: problem in F25 shutdown process
On Thu, 19 Jan 2017 01:04:39 -0500 Joerg Lechner <julechner@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi > is use external disks (USB) to collect TV films and TV shows. > Yesterday I forgot to eject the external disk before shutting down > F25. Result ratarata...... of the external disk during the shut down > process. Currently I have no access to this disk (sata, 1TB) via F25, > F24 and Windows I did not try so far. The shut down process of F25 > takes a lot more time, then the shut down process of F24/F23. > Shutting down F25 a lot of code is displayed. I didn't make any > modification, the system is as originally installed, with the last > updates. This very long lasting shut down process seems to have been > the same since Alpha. With F24/F23 I could shutting down the PC > without destroying an external disk. My system Acer Laptop > E5-571G-50K9, F25 Desktop Version 64bit, the external disk is > connected with an USB adapter, it's a used internal disk. I don't > know whether the disk has had an error previously or not, but I could > save on it about 100GB films before shutting down without of the > "ticking" of a moribund disk. Kind regards I don't have a usb disk, so I'm not familiar with this. But, are you saying that shutting down F25 with a usb disk attached destroyed the usb disk? I think that at shutdown, all buffers are flushed to disk, so that the disk is left in the correct state. I can't see how that would trash a disk. If it did, that's a major bug, and you should open a bugzilla documenting your experience as above. I'm not sure which component does that, unfortunately. Probably the kernel, but systemd is in charge of shutdown, so you could choose either kernel or systemd. https://bugzilla.redhat.com/ _______________________________________________ test mailing list -- test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to test-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Von: stan <stanl-fedorauser@xxxxxxxxxxx>
An: test <test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Verschickt: Do, 19 Jan 2017 5:52 pm
Betreff: Re: problem in F25 shutdown process
On Thu, 19 Jan 2017 01:04:39 -0500 Joerg Lechner <julechner@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi > is use external disks (USB) to collect TV films and TV shows. > Yesterday I forgot to eject the external disk before shutting down > F25. Result ratarata...... of the external disk during the shut down > process. Currently I have no access to this disk (sata, 1TB) via F25, > F24 and Windows I did not try so far. The shut down process of F25 > takes a lot more time, then the shut down process of F24/F23. > Shutting down F25 a lot of code is displayed. I didn't make any > modification, the system is as originally installed, with the last > updates. This very long lasting shut down process seems to have been > the same since Alpha. With F24/F23 I could shutting down the PC > without destroying an external disk. My system Acer Laptop > E5-571G-50K9, F25 Desktop Version 64bit, the external disk is > connected with an USB adapter, it's a used internal disk. I don't > know whether the disk has had an error previously or not, but I could > save on it about 100GB films before shutting down without of the > "ticking" of a moribund disk. Kind regards I don't have a usb disk, so I'm not familiar with this. But, are you saying that shutting down F25 with a usb disk attached destroyed the usb disk? I think that at shutdown, all buffers are flushed to disk, so that the disk is left in the correct state. I can't see how that would trash a disk. If it did, that's a major bug, and you should open a bugzilla documenting your experience as above. I'm not sure which component does that, unfortunately. Probably the kernel, but systemd is in charge of shutdown, so you could choose either kernel or systemd. https://bugzilla.redhat.com/ _______________________________________________ test mailing list -- test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to test-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
_______________________________________________ test mailing list -- test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to test-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx