Patricia I have forwarded your message to John.
Rory On Mon, 31 Jul 2017 10:09:59 -0700 Patricia Shanahan <p...@acm.org> wrote: > This issue is my current focus, so the analysis is very valuable and > timely. It seems likely that there is a common problem, applying to both > documents and profiles, of AOO believing it has finished writing > something too early. > > Unfortunately, I don't think we have any developers who are familiar > with AOO's file write code. I am trying to learn my way around it, but > that may take some time. > > It would be useful to have a survey of the configurations in which these > problems happen. Are they associated with specific operating systems? > More prevalent with network drives? > > Would it be useful for me to read the original thread, or is this an > effective summary? > > On 7/31/2017 9:39 AM, Rory O'Farrell wrote: > > John_Ha, a valued contributor to the OO User Forum, has asked me to post > > this to the developer list. It is a continuation of a previous thread with > > the same title at > > http://www.mail-archive.com/dev@openoffice.apache.org/msg15177.html > > > > ----------------------- > > John_Ha writes > > > > I think that the hashtags are misleading. > > > > The problem is that occasionally Writer creates a flat ASCII file which is > > full of NULL characters and saves the file as a .odt file. > > > > This .odt file is NOT a zipped file and it does NOT have any of the usual > > (content.xml or styles.xml) files. This .odt file is just a flat ASCII > > file, often very large (the same size as the original document?), but > > completely full of NULL characters. Go to > > https://forum.openoffice.org/en/forum/ucp.php?i=pm&mode=view&f=0&p=11590 > > for an example file - crappyfile.odt is 24 kBytes of NULL characters. > > > > Go to [Hint] How did I fix my ODT file at > > https://forum.openoffice.org/en/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=1532. The thread > > has been viewed 194,820 times suggesting this is a serious problem of > > considerable interest to users. No other thread in the forum has been read > > as often. > > > > When the user attempts to open what is effectively a flat ASCII file, > > Writer recognises it is an ASCII file and opens it as if it was a .txt > > file, and offers the filter pop-up. The NULL characters are then displayed > > as hashtags. > > > > I think that the questions the developers ought to be asking include: > > > > 1 At what point in the save process is space on the disk reserved to write > > the .odt file? > > > > 2 Why is this space full of NULL characters - why isn't it random junk from > > the disk? How are the NULL characters written? > > > > 3 What happens to prevent the genuine file being written? > > > > 4 Why is the file full of NULL characters saved as a .odt file? > > > > 5 How can Writer save a file as a .odt file which is not a ZIP file? Why > > was the ZIP process not activated before the file was saved? > > > > 6 Note that Writer continues to write to the disk long after (as much as 30 > > seconds after on a slow network installation) the blue dotted bar crossing > > the bottom of the screen has stopped. Does this have an effect? What > > happens if something interrupts Writer while it is doing these silent > > writes? > > > > 7 There are many, many problems seen on the forum (e.g. spell check stops > > working) which are fixed by creating a new User Profile. As parts of the > > User Profile (eg registrymodifications.xcu and others) seem to get written > > AFTER the .odt file has been written, is a corrupted User Profile a > > manifestation of the same, or similar, problem? > > > > 8 Can the .odt file be written as an atomic process such that either "the > > file as it was when it opened for editing" is saved; or "the file as it is > > now" is saved. Note that the temporary file > > C:\Users\my_name\AppData\Local\Temp\svftc2x7.tmp\svftdera.tmp (or similar > > random name) is a copy of the .odt file as it was opened; and is only > > deleted when the file is saved. Can a check be made and this temporary file > > not be deleted until it is known that the proper .odt file has been > > successfully saved? > > > > 9 It is only GUESSING which suggests that over hasty shutting of a laptop > > lid could be the cause of this. I struggle to see how this could cause it > > because I understood that hibernation / shutting a laptop lid causes a > > graceful shut down, and not one where data might be lost. If this is the > > problem, then is the long delay after the blue bar has ceased causing the > > problem, and any data waiting to be written is lost? Does Writer handle the > > "graceful shutdown" instruction from Windows properly? > > > > 10 I also think that USB sticks are a red-herring. Later versions of > > Windows come with the default setting of not using cacheing (the user has > > to switch it on) so USB sticks can be withdrawn very soon. > > > > In conclusion: I think it needs an analysis of what happens during a Save > > to understand > > > > a) at what point is a large, flat ASCII file full of NULL characters > > created? > > > > b) how can this file be saved as a .odt file when .odt files are ZIPped > > files? > > > > I think that this analysis will lead to a better understanding of where the > > problem lies. > > > > John_Ha > > ----------------------------------- > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@openoffice.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@openoffice.apache.org > > -- Rory O'Farrell <ofarr...@iol.ie> --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: dev-unsubscr...@openoffice.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: dev-h...@openoffice.apache.org