I tested this in an Ubuntu GNOME 16.10 GNOME 3.20 64-bit VM and found that with the new update the issue goes away and the problem here is fixed. Although it should be noted that after updating to the new version it shows any mounted partitions with a long gobbledygook name in the sidebar when running Nautilus as root.
-- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to glib2.0 in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1638245 Title: Files in the root of a folder on another partition symlinked to user's home cannot be moved to trash because of a patch in this package Status in glib2.0 package in Ubuntu: Fix Released Status in glib2.0 source package in Xenial: Confirmed Status in glib2.0 source package in Yakkety: Fix Committed Bug description: [ Description ] Can't trash files if the directory they are in is a symlink to another device [ QA ] Steps: 1. Install system and partition disk into root and data partitions 2. create ~/Data folder, and mount data partition on it 3. create symlinks for ~/whatever/ to ~/Data/something/ 4. delete files directly inside ~/whatever/ What happen: Then Nautilus says: "File can't be put in the trash. Do you want to delete it immediately?". What should happen: The files moved into Trash. [ Regression potential ] The proposed fix uses g_stat instead of g_stat to follow symlinks, so we know where to place the trash (you can't rename() across filesystems). If that is wrong, then it could regress trashing other kinds of files. [ Original ] I'm on Ubuntu 16.10 64-bit with libglib2.0-0 version 2.50.0-1. I've reported this bug (or marked as "it affects me") in a couple of other places before I've finally discovered that this is the package that's causing this problem, which unfortunately has been around for a couple of years now. This bug has been reported upstream as well, but it's just taking very very long to arrive at a decision and take action it seems. Apparently one of the patches (https://sources.debian.net/patches/glib2.0/2.50.1-1/0001-Fix- trashing-on-overlayfs.patch/) which is here (https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+archive/primary/+files/glib2.0_2.50.0-1.debian.tar.xz) to the original package which is here (https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+archive/primary/+files/glib2.0_2.50.0.orig.tar.xz) is the root cause of this annoying problem. As I prefer keeping one patition for the root filesystem (/), one partition for user settings (/home) and one partition for user data (Documents, Downloads, Drive, Music, Pictures, Public, Videos) which are simply symlinked to my home folder for ease of use, I cannot move any file to the trash in the root of these folders when I access them from my home folder or nautilus sidebar. This problem doesn't affect folders at all, nor any other files in subfolders, etc. So I was wondering if Ubuntu devs can leave out that particular patch when building this package for Ubuntu - if it doesn't cause more harm, which I doubt. Otherwise, I would appreciate if I could learn how to do it myself: how can I (as an end-user) compile the contents of "glib2.0_2.50.0.orig.tar.xz" with all the patches, etc. in "glib2.0_2.50.0-1.debian.tar.xz" except "0001-Fix-trashing-on- overlayfs.patch"? To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/glib2.0/+bug/1638245/+subscriptions -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages Post to : touch-packages@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp