- While winnowing devices, the zram and nullptr cases
were mixed together; split them, for the sake of
logging more accurately.
- While here, fix up some coding-style issues.
- Q_ASSERT doesn't work in constexpr functions because it's not
- May as well calculate bytes at compile-time, no need to give
the runaround via number-of-MiB
This fixes the crash by calling the model-reset first, then
refreshing. Previously, the destructors that do the work
were still being called in the wrong order.
FIXES#1019
- The ResetHelper only finalized changes to the module on
destruction, but calls to refresh() assumed it was already
done. This leads to crashes when refresh() uses an intermediate
state of the model.
Introduce extra helpers, and rename refresh() to avoid calling the
old implementation from any code. The new helper just creates and
destroys a ResetHelper, before creating and destroying an object
that calls the new refreshAfterModelChange().
FIXES#1019
ESP == boot. at best this is duplicated information, at worst kpmcore may
implode if you try to set a boot flag since that is technically an MBR
type flag and means nothing within the context of GPT where ESP is the flag
to set.
having ESP as active flag AND then trying to set ESP means nothing is
set since kpmcore will think ESP is already set (it is listed as active
after all). this ultimately meant that nothing was set since there was
no delta between the requested flags and the already active flags.
- 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
- 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.
- 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).