I have my odt-files on a NAT system, which is accessed via NFS. Today, my day was ruined because one odt-file which was open (by LibreOffice 3.5.0rc3 on a debian "Lenny" system) when I shut down the system yesterday was gone today without a trace. Thank god another odt- file that was also open is still there. Please note that I did not have a crash or power-outage, but just made a normal shutdown.
I'm not sure whether this is the same bug, because other users have reported that they had an empty file, but my file vanished completely. Maybe the other affected users could clarify this. I've been using OpenOffice 2.4 for several years with the same NAT, the same NFS-setup, the same OS and the same odt-files - and I have never had dataloss. Also, I might add that to categorize this bug as "enhancement" is really an insult - no bug can be worse than any bug that causes dataloss especially if complete files are deleted. -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop Packages, which is subscribed to libreoffice in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/817326 Title: [Upstream] Previously-saved LibreOffice document lost by power outage (became 0 bytes long) - LibreOffice should call fsync Status in LibreOffice Productivity Suite: Fix Released Status in “libreoffice” package in Ubuntu: Triaged Bug description: I was working on a document in LibreOffice today while my battery was low and so I was frequently saving, which I thought would help me if I lost power. However, when I eventually did lose power and later rebooted, the document had become 0 bytes long. LibreOffice was not able to restore the auto-saved copy either. As a result, I have lost a whole week of notes for one of my courses. After researching online, it seems that this is caused by the application not calling fsync() (or fdatasync()) when saving files. Due to delayed allocation in modern filesystems, there is no guarantee that the new file's data has actually been written to disk unless the application calls fsync. So if an app writes a new file and replaces the old one with it without fsync'ing the new one first then there is a window of opportunity during which a power failure will result in the loss of BOTH versions of the file. In ext4 this window is also much larger than in ext3. Theodore Tso blogged about this at http://ldn.linuxfoundation.org /blog-entry/delayed-allocation-and-zero-length-file-problem and http://www.linuxfoundation.org/news- media/blogs/browse/2009/03/don%E2%80%99t-fear-fsync. He strongly recommends to call fsync in this situation. Please update LibreOffice to fsync() saved files so that other users do not lose their data like I did. ProblemType: Bug DistroRelease: Ubuntu 11.04 Package: libreoffice-core 1:3.3.2-1ubuntu5 ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 2.6.38-8.42-generic 2.6.38.2 Uname: Linux 2.6.38-8-generic x86_64 Architecture: amd64 Date: Wed Jul 27 21:37:02 2011 InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 10.04 LTS "Lucid Lynx" - Release amd64 (20100429) ProcEnviron: LANGUAGE=en_US:en LANG=en_US.UTF-8 SHELL=/bin/bash SourcePackage: libreoffice UpgradeStatus: Upgraded to natty on 2011-04-29 (89 days ago) To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/df-libreoffice/+bug/817326/+subscriptions -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~desktop-packages Post to : desktop-packages@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~desktop-packages More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp