FOG 1.5.9-RC2 incompatible with Windows 10 v2004 Partition Structure
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Original disk is 1 TB. Destination disk is 0.5 TB .
d1.partitions
label: gpt label-id: FB16BC47-E9A4-4A26-9E00-495F842C2401 device: /dev/sda unit: sectors first-lba: 34 last-lba: 2147483614 sector-size: 512 /dev/sda1 : start= 2048, size= 204800, type=C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B, uuid=DB56A1C9-1019-46FE-9C8A-8D561A3E1DE4, name="EFI system partition", attrs="GUID:63" /dev/sda2 : start= 206848, size= 32768, type=E3C9E316-0B5C-4DB8-817D-F92DF00215AE, uuid=B1AC3238-84AA-410A-97AC-7C2683A132C5, name="Microsoft reserved partition", attrs="GUID:63" /dev/sda3 : start= 239616, size= 2146203765, type=EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7, uuid=D6FFACFD-59C5-4AAA-995C-539E27EAD00A, name="Basic data partition" /dev/sda4 : start= 2146445312, size= 1034240, type=DE94BBA4-06D1-4D40-A16A-BFD50179D6AC, uuid=A7345D7C-3D3F-44E9-B556-6F89394B0C76, attrs="RequiredPartition GUID:63"
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d1.minimum.partitions
label: gpt label-id: FB16BC47-E9A4-4A26-9E00-495F842C2401 device: /dev/sda unit: sectors first-lba: 34 last-lba: 2147483614 sector-size: 512 /dev/sda1 : start= 2048, size= 204800, type=C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B, uuid=DB56A1C9-1019-46FE-9C8A-8D561A3E1DE4, name="EFI system partition", attrs="GUID:63" /dev/sda2 : start= 206848, size= 32768, type=E3C9E316-0B5C-4DB8-817D-F92DF00215AE, uuid=B1AC3238-84AA-410A-97AC-7C2683A132C5, name="Microsoft reserved partition", attrs="GUID:63" /dev/sda3 : start= 239616, size= 20614004, type=EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7, uuid=D6FFACFD-59C5-4AAA-995C-539E27EAD00A, name="Basic data partition" /dev/sda4 : start= 2146445312, size= 1034240, type=DE94BBA4-06D1-4D40-A16A-BFD50179D6AC, uuid=A7345D7C-3D3F-44E9-B556-6F89394B0C76, name="attrs=\x22RequiredPartition GUID:63"
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d1.fixed_size_partitions
1:2:4
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@sudburr Thanks! I am wondering if you really need that recovery partition (sda4)? This is kind of blocking for this partition layout to be shrinkable down to the size of your 500 GB disk. The start of sda4, sector 2146445312 is is not moved forward by FOS as we might cause an issue doing so.
A way to quickly fix this is using a partitioning too (probably even Windows disk management of your running system), shrink sda3 (C: in Windows) down to e.g. 400 GB, move the recovery partition forward as well (don’t think Windows disk management can do this but I am not sure) and then recapture the image.
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Shrinking partition 3, then moving partition 4, I can capture and deploy.
Going from a 110GB drive, to a 1024GB drive, partition 4 grows by roughly a factor of 10. The size of partition 4 is obviously based on % of disk space used on original instead of maintaining the fixed size that is intended.
Yes, a recovery partition is desired.
This is a workaround I can live with for now, until a fix is developed, but it puts a kink in the deployment process as we must now ensure a system has a drive that is no smaller than the original system the image was built on.
Makes me think that FOG is resizing the wrong partitions when capturing, though it says it has detected the correct fixed size partitions.
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@sudburr said in FOG 1.5.9-RC2 incompatible with Windows 10 v2004 Partition Structure:
The size of partition 4 is obviously based on % of disk space used on original instead of maintaining the fixed size that is intended.
Really?? Can you please take a picture of Windows disk management after the deploy and first reboot?
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@Sebastian-Roth The math bears it out. will check again
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Okay, that is peculiar. My test yesterday to a physical device resulted in the expanded partition 4. My test today to a VM did not. Partition 4 remained right-sized.
I don’t know when I’ll be able to do another physical test, but I will check again, somewhen.
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@Sebastian-Roth Okay, I wasn’t dreaming it.
Here’s the original on a 1024 GB drive after I’ve shrunk the partitions with GPARTED
And here’s the result immediately after going onto a 110 GB drive.
My original percentage math just happened to be a coincidence. But partition 4 is definitely not reproducing as intended.
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@sudburr Do I get this right? It does expand sda3 and sda4.
Is
d1.fixed_size_partitions
still set to1:2:4
for this image? -
No.
cat d1.fixed_size_partitions 1:2
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@sudburr Did you manually edit the file or recapture the image or why is this changed? Just trying to make sense of this.
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It’s consistently inconsistent.
Today I created some more VMs. All with 64 GB drives. Essentially …
Capture VM1
cat d1.fixed_size_partitions 1:2
Capture VM1 a second time
cat d1.fixed_size_partitions 1:2:4
Capture VM2
cat d1.fixed_size_partitions 1:2:4
None will deploy to a drive smaller than the original 64 GB, though the data is only 12 GB uncompressed. It’s just a Windows install.
Looking at the 50 GB drive after a failed attempt to push the 64 GB image onto it. Diskpart reports a single 63 GB partition. wha?
Gnome Partition Editor shows the drive as 50 GB unallocated.Dumping one of the 1:2:4 images onto a 2TB drive now; and it’s good.
So Partition 3, isn’t really resizing smaller when captured, and Partition 4 is sometimes not identified as fixed size.
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So far today, working with all new VMs again, things are looking good.
I made one change to the mastering process, to use Disk Management (diskmgmt.msc) within Windows to shrink the OS partition (to just 5GB free space) before sysprep and shutdown. It’s capturing partitions properly with fixed 1:2:4 so far.
Captured images are deploying properly to HDDs both larger and smaller than the original 64GB.
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@sudburr said:
Partition 4 is sometimes not identified as fixed size.
Is this something you can reproduce?
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Not reliably.
VM I’m working on now refuses to capture with partition 4 as fixed. It’s throwing the error during capture:
blkid: error: /dev/sda4: No such file or directory
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Okay, you’re going to love this. I only have one success to go on so far, but here’s my current working theory.
Failure scenario
- Cold boot VM to Quick Inventory
- Shutdown VM after the natural reboot after QI
- Create Task
- Cold boot VM into Task
- Partition 4 is not recognized as fixed.
Success scenario
- Cold boot VM to Quick Inventory
- Pause VM after the natural reboot after QI
- Create Task
- Resume VM into Task
- Partition 4 is recognized properly.
Testing further, but right now, Cold booting into the task appears to be the guilty party.
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@sudburr said in FOG 1.5.9-RC2 incompatible with Windows 10 v2004 Partition Structure:
Testing further, but right now, Cold booting into the task appears to be the guilty party.
Wow that would be a really nasty one. Please keep us posted.
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Sigh … cold vs warm boot is not it.
New VMs today, and just to spite me, it failed on the warm reboot test. It worked after resetting to the checkpoint prior to the initial capture attempt. So it worked on a cold boot.
This is definitely the indicator that the capture will be bad.
blkid: error: /dev/sda4: No such file or directory
If I see this, I shut the VM down, revert the checkpoint and try again.
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@sudburr This is a mystery to me. Why would it find four partitions to begin with but then the device node file is one?!?
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And it appears to be totally random whether it throws that error, cold boot, warm boot, reset, whatever. If blkid: error comes up I just keep resetting the vm until it goes away .
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@sudburr Is the partition layout still fine when you see this
blkid: error: /dev/sda4
thing on subsequent tries?May I ask you to do the following: Let it try to capture a few times more. Every time you save a copy of the
/images/dev/aabbccddeeff/d1.partitions
(this aabb… is the MAC address of the host without colons) file to another location for us to compare those afterwards. Whenever you see theblkid...
error you name itd1.partitions_fail_X
(put in numbers instead of X) and if you don’t see the error you name itd1.partitions_ok_X
.sfdiskPartitionFileNameWhat kind of VM do you use? I am wondering if I am able to replicate the issue using the same setup?!