Error Creating File System Ubuntu
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Ubuntu Create Filesystem
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Error Mounting Filesystem Ubuntu
rise to the top Error formatting disk; creating file system up vote 0 down vote favorite EDIT: I WENT TO STORE AND EVERYTHING WAS OKAY, THANKS! :) I'm trying to format using "disk" my new hard drive to install ubuntu fully on it, but the error comes up every time. I tried using fast and slow format, both don't seem to work. here is the full error I get: udisks-error-quark 11 Error creating file system: Command-line `parted --script "/dev/sda" mktable gpt' exited with non-zero exit status 1: Error: Input/output error during write on /dev/sda (udisks-error-quark, 0) I'm trying to format because the installer also gets stuck, I dont know if the problem is my hard drive -it's new-, the pavilion computer or ubuntu. I doubt its the last one because I had similar problems installing windows 10 Anyone know what I can do to fix this? Thanks in advance! partitioning hard-drive share|improve this question edited Jul 8 '15 at 13:21 asked Jul 8 '15 at 8:21 Generalcooky 32 Is you disc ok? –frlan Jul 8 '15 at 8:35 add a comment| 2 Answers 2 active oldest votes up vote 0 down vote accepted You can't fix this. If it's a new drive, go to your dealer and request a sawp under warranty. Be sure to mention "DOA" (Dead On Arrival) To be absolutely sure: sudo apt-get install smartmontools sudo smartctl --scan and then perform: sudo smartctl --all /dev/XdY where X and Y are the letters that came up for your drive in sudo smartctl --scan Sorry for the bad news. share|improve this answer edited Jul 8 '15 at 11:05 Fabby 15.4k1240114 answered Jul 8
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Fdisk: Unable To Read /dev/sdb: Input/output Error
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Input/output Error (udisks-error-quark, 0)
Tags Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Ask Ubuntu is a question and answer site for Ubuntu users and developers. Join them; it fdisk unable to read /dev/sda input/output error only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top Error creating partition up vote 1 down vote favorite http://askubuntu.com/questions/645820/error-formatting-disk-creating-file-system 1 I am trying to create a new partition in a free slot of an hard drive using the Gnome Disk utility (on 14.04). I always get the message below: Error creating partition on /dev/sda: Command-line `parted --align optimal --script "/dev/sda" "mkpart logical ext2 119947MiB 225767517695b"' exited with non-zero exit status 1: Error: You requested a partition from 126GB to 226GB. The closest location we can manage is 126GB to 226GB. (udisks-error-quark, 0) What can http://askubuntu.com/questions/512196/error-creating-partition be the cause of this? And can it be solved? Edit: A screen capture detailing the structure of this particular hard drive, with the partition at cause selected: 14.04 hard-drive share|improve this question edited Aug 20 '14 at 17:35 asked Aug 16 '14 at 15:15 Luís de Sousa 6,034143566 1 Have you tried partitioning with GParted? –CarrotIsland Aug 20 '14 at 18:33 I am trying to create an encrypted partition, as far as I know GParted does not have this functionality. –Luís de Sousa Aug 21 '14 at 16:34 add a comment| 1 Answer 1 active oldest votes up vote 0 down vote accepted I was trying to create an encrypted partition in that unallocated space following these instructions at the Wiki, this being the reason why I was using the Disk Utility. But it was returning the error above, even when instructed to create a non-ecrypted partition (ext4). Even though GParted seems to lack this functionality it succeeded in creating a non-encrypted partition in the allocated space. After that the Disk Utility itself was able to encrypt the partition. In all likelihood the Disk Utility version shipped with Ubuntu 14.04 has a bug that prevents it from creating new partitions. The detailed steps were: In GParted select the unallocated space and select New, give it a label in the menu t
on 2011-08-10 6 This bug affects 1 person Affects Status Importance https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/823944 Assigned to Milestone gnome-disk-utility (Ubuntu) Edit Expired https://help.ubuntu.com/community/EncryptedFilesystemsOnRemovableStorage Undecided Unassigned Edit You need to log in to change this bug's status. Affecting: gnome-disk-utility (Ubuntu) Filed here by: federica When: 2011-08-10 Completed: 2012-02-13 Target Distribution Baltix BOSS Juju Charms Collection Elbuntu Guadalinex Guadalinex input/output error Edu Kiwi Linux nUbuntu PLD Linux Tilix tuXlab Ubuntu Ubuntu Linaro Evaluation Build Ubuntu RTM Package (Find…) Project (Find…) Status Importance Expired Undecided Assigned to Nobody Me Comment on this change (optional) Email me about changes to this bug report Also affects project unable to read (?) Also affects distribution/package Nominate for series Bug Description help..can not format the memory,When I try to format gives me error HELP ME :( ProblemType: Bug DistroRelease: Ubuntu 11.04 Package: nautilus 1:2.32.2.1-0ubuntu13 ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 2.6.38-10.46-generic 2.6.38.7 Uname: Linux 2.6.38-10-generic i686 Architecture: i386 Date: Wed Aug 10 15:41:15 2011 ExecutablePath: /usr/bin/nautilus InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 10.10 "Maverick Meerkat" - Release i386 (20101007) ProcEnviron: LANGUAGE=it_IT:en LANG=it_IT.UTF-8 SHELL=/bin/bash SourcePackage: nautilus UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to natty on 2011-08-02 (8 days ago) Tags: apport-bug apport-lpi i386 natty running-unity Edit Tag help federica (fe-fo-92) wrote on 2011-08-10: #1 Dependencies.txt Edit (5.5 KiB, text/plain; charset="utf-8") GConfNonDefault.txt Edit (652 bytes, text/plain; charset="utf-8") ProcMaps.txt Edit (54.1 KiB, text/plain; charset="utf-8") ProcStatus.txt Edit (781 bytes, text/plain; charset="utf-8") XsessionErrors.txt Edit (181.6 KiB, text/plain; charset="utf-8") usr_lib_nautilus.txt Edit (318 bytes, text/plain; charset="utf-8") Marc Deslauri
Introduction Easy setup using disk utility Creating a new encrypted partition Encrypting an existing partition Using your encrypted partition Expert setup using command line only Install cryptsetup Identifying Attached Storage Stronger Encryption Preparation (optional) Filesystem Preparation Filesystem Encryption Creating a Filesystem Mount Encrypted Filesystem Sources & credits Introduction Encrypting removable devices (USB flash drives, external hard drives, etc) provides a method to guarantee data security in the event of loss, theft or confiscation. When backing up personal information onto external storage, encryption is a recommended preparation for the filesystem. Recent versions of Gnome will now support encrypted filesystems on removable storage by prompting the user for the passphrase when the device is automounted. Easy setup using disk utility Applicable to Ubuntu 10.04 and probably to newer releases You must install the package cryptsetup. Install the ''cryptsetup'' package Disk Utility is included by default (or can easily be installed). It should be in System - Administration - Disk utility (or type 'palimpsest' in terminal). Install the ''gnome-disk-utility'' package (if missing) Partitioning is dangerous! BACK UP everything and BE SURE to format the correct drive. Creating a new encrypted partition In brief, the steps are (please improve...): Start Disk Utility Make SURE you identify the proper drive in the left hand panel If needed, create empty space on the disk by resizing/deleting partitions (CAREFUL!) In the "Volumes" graphic overview, click the appropriate empty block Click Create partition to create the partition to be encrypted Check Encrypt underlying device They will then prompt you for a password. Chose a decent password - your encryption will only be as strong as your password. Don't use your birthdate, or your IP, or your address.