[Bug 1766945] Re: (EFI on top of legacy install) choosing "replace" or "resize" options in partitioning may lead to an install failure
Mathieu Trudel-Lapierre
mathieu.tl at gmail.com
Thu Oct 25 16:47:47 UTC 2018
Please do not assign yourselves on this bug.
Assignment only needs to happen if you're going to work on it, and this
is closed as Fix Released.
** Changed in: partman-auto (Ubuntu Bionic)
Assignee: Ravishankar Kathaotiya (ravikathiyadell) => (unassigned)
** Changed in: ubiquity (Ubuntu)
Assignee: AB marof (marof) => (unassigned)
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1766945
Title:
(EFI on top of legacy install) choosing "replace" or "resize" options
in partitioning may lead to an install failure
Status in partman-auto package in Ubuntu:
Fix Released
Status in partman-efi package in Ubuntu:
Fix Released
Status in ubiquity package in Ubuntu:
Fix Released
Status in partman-auto source package in Bionic:
Fix Released
Status in partman-efi source package in Bionic:
Fix Released
Status in ubiquity source package in Bionic:
Fix Released
Bug description:
[Impact]
If I have existing data on disk built by a previous version of Ubuntu
(in BIOS (legacy) mode, or a previous Windows install, and no EFI
system partition on disk; the installer presents three choices:
- Replace $existing and reinstall. (if a previous Ubuntu install was found)
- Resize and install
- Erase disk and install.
The first two options will attempt to complete the installation in EFI
mode (as they should) but do not create an EFI system partition, which
is required as a place to put shim and grub on disk for booting. The
installer will then crash / fail as grub-install fails to find the ESP
when copying the bootloader.
The last option works correctly, it creates the ESP as it erases the
entire disks and proceeds with new partitioning.
The proposed changes fix ESP creation for the replace and resize
cases, additionally disabling the reuse-partition option as it would
lead to unbootable systems without an existing ESP.
[Test Case]
A few valid cases to try, both for desktop and server, each of these
on a clean disk:
* In legacy BIOS mode, install Ubuntu (whole disk).
* Switch to UEFI mode
* Start the Ubuntu installer.
* In partitioning, make sure the 'reuse existing partition' option is not visible (reuse, 'replace' should still be present).
* Select resize and install.
* Check if installation succeeds and system boots.
* In legacy BIOS mode, install Ubuntu (whole disk).
* Switch to UEFI mode
* Start the Ubuntu installer.
* In guided partitioning select the replace existing and install option.
* Check if installation succeeds and system boots.
* In legacy BIOS mode, install Ubuntu (manual partitioning, create 3 primary partitions, leave enough free space for another install).
* Switch to UEFI mode
* Start the Ubuntu installer.
* In guided partitioning select the use biggest free space option.
* Check if installation succeeds and system boots.
* In UEFI mode start the Ubuntu installer.
* Select a clean whole-disk install.
* Check if installation succeeds and system boots.
Additional random partitioning scheme dogfooding tests are welcome.
[Regression Potential]
The main change affects the recipes for -amd64-efi cases, so theoretically in the worst-case scenario there might be some problems when installing systems in UEFI mode with guided partitioning, like: wrong partitioning scheme present or the ESP not correctly created. But those regressions should be easily noticeable during testing.
Another small regression potential is in invalid ESP counting and the users not getting the 'reuse partition' option even if the ESP is present. But that also should be covered through the tests.
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