- Reported by Bill Auger (I think), a 15GiB disk wouldn't hold
a 8.9GiB root plus 4GiB swap -- due to 10% overprovisioning
of swap, plus the 2.1GiB fudge factor.
- Calculating first free sector had an off-by-one so that
partitioning would start at 2049.
- EFI boot partition grew 1 sector larger than desired.
- While here, align everything to 1MiB boundaries as well.
FIXES#1008
Untangle the shortcuts; Create and Cancel had an overlap.
Skip 'r' (Revert all changes) and 'e' (Edit) and settle on
'a' (which might also mean "Add").
FIXES#977
- If there is a partition already (newly) created, then pass that
to the dialog so that it can use the setings previously applied
(e.g. mount point and flags).
- This avoids the case where you create or format a partition,
then click on it again to edit it and the previous settings are lost.
- Setup the lsit of flags consistently, by providing the available
and to-be-checked flags.
- In CreatePartitionDialog, assume that ~0 is all the flags.
This file is full of helper functions for the partition-editing
dialogs. At first it was just mount-point helper functions,
but there is other functionality that can be refactored.
- If we're changing the flags to enable EFI boot, then that's
enough to satisfy the (future) EFI bootability check.
This is for issue #622 as well. Fixes#884.
- Use the desired (future) flags, if set, to initialize the
flags checkboxes. If there are no future flags set, this
returns active flags as before.
- This fixes the situation where editing a partition, changing
flags, then editing it *again* re-starts with the original
flags instead of the modified flags.
- PartitionInfo maintains information on "what is desired" for
a given Partition. Now we can set desired flags, alongside
the flags already supported by Partition (where activeFlags()
gives you the flags currently set on that partition).
- Avoids case where you edit a partition with a mountpoint
set; previously, calling setText() would update the text
but leave the selected index unchanged (usually 0), so that
later calling selectedMountPoint() would return empty.
- Move to one place which handles the standard mount points
- While here, introduce explicit "(no mount point)" string
into the combo box. This is prep-work for issue #951.