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This page documents common bugs in Fedora 19 and, if available, fixes or workarounds for these problems.  If you find your problem in this page, ''do not file a bug for it, unless otherwise instructed.''  Where appropriate, a reference to the current bug(s) in Bugzilla is included.
This page documents common bugs in Fedora 19 and, if available, fixes or workarounds for these problems.  If you find your problem in this page, ''do not file a bug for it, unless otherwise instructed.''  Where appropriate, a reference to the current bug(s) in Bugzilla is included.
{{admon/note|Fedora 19 pre-release|Fedora 19 has not yet been released. During this pre-release period, this page will cover known issues in the Fedora 19 pre-releases. Issues that are fixed will be removed from the page once a fix is available (for instance, an issue that affects the Beta but is fixed in the final release will be removed at the time of that release).}}


== Release Notes ==
== Release Notes ==
Read the [[F19 Beta release announcement]] and the [http://fedorapeople.org/groups/docs/release-notes/en-US/ Fedora 19 Beta Release Notes] <!--[http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/19/html/Release_Notes/ Fedora 19 release notes]--> for specific information about changes in Fedora 19 and other general information.
Read the [[F19_release_announcement]] and the [http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/19/html/Release_Notes/ Fedora 19 release notes] for specific information about changes in Fedora 19 and other general information.


== My bug is not listed ==
== My bug is not listed ==
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== Resolved issues ==
== Installation issues ==
{{Anchor|uefi-upgrade-grub2}}
{{Anchor|installer-squish}}
=== Native UEFI Fedora installation fails to boot after upgrade to Fedora 19 ===
=== Installer screens sometimes do not appear at full screen width ===
<small>[[#uefi-upgrade-grub2|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:966586|Bugzilla: #966586]]</small>
<small>[[#installer-squish|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:869364|Bugzilla: #869364]]</small>
 
Sometimes when you visit a screen in the Fedora 19 installer (a 'spoke') more than once, it will display incorrectly - it will be squeezed into an area less than the full width of the screen, and sometimes less than the full height also. We have been attempting to fix this bug for a while but it is a difficult one to pin down.
 
Usually you can still use the screen in the reduced size version, though it may look very strange. If you get completely stuck, though, you will unfortunately be required to reboot and restart the installation process. We apologize for any inconvenience.
 
Sadly, we were unable to resolve this issue ahead of the final release of Fedora 19.  We were unable to diagnose the cause of the issue, so without any idea how long it might take to fix or how difficult the fix may be, we could not consider adjusting the release schedule.  We will attempt to make sure the issue is fixed for the release of Fedora 20.
 
{{Anchor|mac-uefi-esp}}
=== Apple EFI Macs: EFI install alongside existing EFI installed OS (including OS X) results in ''you have not created a bootloader stage1 target device'' error ===
<small>[[#mac-uefi-esp|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:1010495|Bugzilla: #1010495]]</small>
 
If you try to do a native UEFI install of Fedora 19 alongside a native UEFI install of OS X and re-use the existing EFI system partition, the installer will incorrectly consider the existing EFI system partition as invalid and report that ''you have not created a bootloader stage1 target device''. Unfortunately, the Fedora automatic partitioning algorithm will actually attempt to re-use the EFI system partition, and so you will run into this bug in any Fedora 19 installation attempt where you use the automatic partitioning algorithm and do not choose to delete the existing EFI system partition.
 
Practically speaking, there are a few different approaches to dealing with this problem. If you do not mind losing your OS X installation, you can simply choose to delete it (including the EFI system partition), and let Fedora occupy the rest of the disk. Fedora should create a new EFI system partition and install successfully.
 
If you wish to preserve your OS X installation, install Fedora 19 Final, and dual boot, you must use the installer's 'custom partitioning' path. Make sure to leave the existing EFI system partition intact, but do '''not''' set a mount point for it. Do '''not''' use the ''Create partitions for me'' button. Instead, manually create a new EFI system partition, and set it to be mounted at {{filename|/boot/efi}}. Manually create other partitions as usual. Complete custom partitioning, and your installation should proceed successfully. See the [https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/19/html/Installation_Guide/ Installation Guide] for general instructions on the partitioning process, if necessary.
 
You could also try installing Fedora 18 or Fedora 19 Beta. These should allow you to use automatic partitioning to install alongside OS X, assuming you do not run into any other bugs they may have contained. You could then upgrade to Fedora 19 Final - with [[FedUp]] from Fedora 18, or yum from Fedora 19 Beta. You will still wind up with two EFI system partitions in this case.
 
We are investigating the possibility of producing an [[Anaconda/Updates|updates image]] to make it easier to deal with this bug. We apologize for any inconvenience it causes you.
 
{{Anchor|mdraid-live}}
=== Intel firmware RAID-1+ sets not visible in live installer ===
<small>[[#mdraid-live|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:975649|Bugzilla: #975649]]</small>
 
Fedora 19 testing indicates that Intel firmware RAID sets at level 1 and higher (so not level 0) fail to appear as potential target devices in the installer when running from a live image. They appear as normal when installing from a non-live image (the DVD or network installer).
 
This issue appears to be caused by mdmon failing to start or being killed during the live image start up. It may be possible to work around it by starting mdmon manually prior to running the installer. The other 'workaround' for the issue is simply to install from the DVD or network install image rather than a live image if you wish to install to an affected firmware RAID device.
 
{{Anchor|mdraid-fstab-crash}}
=== Installer crashes with ''No such file or directory: '/dev/md''' if MD-RAID set is referred to by device node name in {{filename|/etc/fstab}} ===
<small>[[#mdraid-fstab-crash|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:980267|Bugzilla: #980267]]</small>
 
If you attempt to install Fedora 19 on a system containing an existing Linux system whose {{filename|/etc/fstab}} contains one or more entries referring to a partition on an MD-RAID set by its device node name (e.g. {{filename|/dev/md0p1}} or {{filename|/dev/md127p2}}), the installer will likely crash, with the error ''No such file or directory: '/dev/md'''.
 
Identifying any storage device by its device node name is fragile and it is usually a better idea to use something more robust such as a filesystem label or UUID, but it is of course a bug that the Fedora installer crashes when it encounters such a situation; it should handle it more gracefully.
 
To work around this issue, either adjust the {{filename|/etc/fstab}} entry to refer to the device(s) by a more robust identifier, or temporarily comment them out while running the Fedora installation. The latter approach will have the minor drawback that Fedora will not be able to identify the device(s) as being part of any existing installation, and will instead display them in the 'Unknown' group of the Custom Partitioning screen, if you visit it during your installation.
 
{{Anchor|partial-kickstart-problems}}
=== Problems with Installation Source and Installation Destination spokes when installing from a partially complete kickstart ===
<small>[[#partial-kickstart-problems|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:972265|Bugzilla: #972265]] - [[rhbug:972266|Bugzilla: #972266]]</small>
 
If you attempt to install Fedora 19 using a partially-complete kickstart - in particular, a kickstart which specifies a package set but no installation source or destination - you will find that the interactive process for setting those options behaves strangely. On the Installation Source spoke, you may not be able to use the default ''Closest mirror'' option. If you are affected by this problem, you can manually enter the URL of the Fedora 19 mirror list, and check the ''This URL refers to a mirror list.'' box. The URLs for the 64-bit and 32-bit mirror lists are <code>https://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/mirrorlist?repo=fedora-19&arch=x86_64</code> and <code>https://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/mirrorlist?repo=fedora-19&arch=i386</code> respectively.
 
The Installation Destination spoke appears to require you to complete it multiple times to complete configuration: each time it will set another element of the configuration. Even after doing this, you may find a bootloader target disk is not selected. To set one, first enter the ''Full disk summary and bootloader...'' screen and select not to install a bootloader, and complete the spoke once again. Then complete the spoke one more time, this time selecting the correct target disk for the bootloader, and the configuration should now be complete.
 
As these issues take some effort to work around, it may be a better idea simply to use a complete kickstart, or at least one which specifies an installation source and destination. The [[Anaconda/Kickstart]] page should help you with the required syntax.
 
{{Anchor|no-media-present}}
=== Storage devices without media show as 0-byte partitions and can crash the installer ===
<small>[[#no-media-present|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:960794|Bugzilla: #960794]]</small>
 
Several testers have reported an unusual case with certain storage devices in the Fedora 19 installer. Some devices report themselves to the kernel as drives with 'no media present'. Identified cases so far include an Android-based phone when plugged into the system but not set in USB storage mode, and a few types of card reader when no card is inserted.
 
If such a device is present during installation, it will not be shown in the 'Installation Destination' screen's list of disks, but if you enter the custom partitioning mode, the device will appear as a single 0-byte partition. If you attempt to manipulate this partition in any way, the installer may crash with an error ''AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'type' ''.
 
There are two obvious workarounds for this issue. In most cases it should be possible simply to disconnect the offending device: there is no need to connect your phone or external card reader during installation. If the offending device is not easily removable, you can simply leave the bogus 0-byte 'partition' entirely alone, and your installation should proceed successfully.
 
{{Anchor|texlive-ht-insanity}}
=== Network installation with ''Authoring and Publishing'' group selected fails ===
<small>[[#texlive-ht-insanity|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:959696|Bugzilla: #959696]]</small>
 
Due to an unmarked conflict between two texlive-related packages ({{package|ht}} and {{package|texlive-tex4ht-bin}}), Fedora 19 installations with the ''Authoring and Publishing'' package group selected (and possibly with the ''Font design'' group selected) will fail.
 
The offending packages (and groups) are not present on the Fedora 19 DVD, so the bug is not present there. The issue affects only network installs. It will be resolved once the conflict between the two packages is fixed with an update, so long as you enable the ''updates'' repository in your installation.
 
{{Anchor|uefi-msdos-label}}
=== UEFI install to ms-dos ('MBR') labelled disk fails with unclear errors ===
<small>[[#uefi-msdos-label|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:978430|Bugzilla: #978430]]</small>
 
As veterans of the [https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/16/html/Release_Notes/sect-Release_Notes-Changes_for_Sysadmin.html Fedora 16 release] may remember, there are two commonly-used 'disk label' or 'partition table' formats known as 'gpt' and 'ms-dos' or 'mbr'.
 
Fedora 19's installer effectively requires that native UEFI installations be performed to a disk with the 'gpt' format (in fact, it requires that the EFI system partition be on such a disk). In fact, this is not a requirement of the official UEFI specification: it leaves open the possibility of an EFI system partition residing on an ms-dos labelled disk, though it is possible that some firmwares may not support such a configuration.
 
In any case, if you attempt to do a native UEFI install of Fedora 19 such that the EFI system partition will reside on an ms-dos labelled disk, this will fail. You are likely get an error of the form ''you have not created a bootloader stage1 target device'', possibly with the note that the volume backing the EFI system partition ''must have one of the following disklabel types: gpt.'' You may also observe unusual behaviour on the ''Reclaim space'' screen, if you use it in your installation attempt. Note that you can encounter this error message even when installing to a gpt-labelled disk if you use custom partitioning and fail to correctly configure an EFI system partition: when doing a UEFI install you must include a partition of the 'EFI system partition' type, and mount it at the path /boot/efi.
 
We have found that there appear to be some systems 'in the wild' with existing native UEFI operating system installations to an ms-dos labelled drive. Unfortunately, this bug means you cannot install Fedora 19 in a dual-boot configuration to the same drive as such an operating system. You would need to install to a second drive in order to dual boot.


If you had a UEFI native installation of Fedora 18 with the default bootloader configuration, and you upgraded to a Fedora 19 package set that includes a version of {{package|grub2}} earlier than grub2-2.00-18.fc19, the upgraded system will likely fail to load grub correctly at boot. This is due to a bug which caused initialization of grub2 in graphical mode to fail on UEFI systems. The bug was worked around for fresh installs by having grub2 configured in console instead of graphical mode, but as upgraded systems use the old bootloader configuration, the bug still affected upgrades.
If you wish to do a native UEFI installation of Fedora 19, it must be to a gpt-labelled disk, or you must configure your installation such that all existing partitions on the disk on which the EFI system partition will reside will be deleted (doing this will cause the installer to reformat it with a gpt disk label). Note that it is not possible to change the label format of a disk in a non-destructive way with the installer: it requires a complete re-format.


This issue was fixed in the updated ''grub2-2.00-18.fc19'' package. To solve the issue if you already upgraded and are affected, you can change grub2 to console mode. Boot a live or rescue image, mount the installed system (at least the /etc and EFI system partitions), edit {{filename|etc/default/grub}} within the mounted filesystem and change the line that starts ''GRUB_TERMINAL_OUTPUT'' to read ''GRUB_TERMINAL_OUTPUT="console"'' (or create such a line if none exists). Then run {{command|grub2-mkconfig}} with the -o parameter to specify the correct location for the updated configuration file within the EFI system partition. The system should now boot correctly.
You can, however, convert it using the <code>gdisk</code> utility from a live image prior to running the installer.  Simply invoke <code>gdisk</code> as root using your hard disk device as the first argument (e.g. <code>su -c 'gdisk /dev/sda'</code>) and it will offer to convert the partition table for you.  After answering "yes", type <code>w</code> and press Enter to commit the changes to disk, then type <code>q</code> and press Enter to exit <code>gdisk</code>. Please note that conversion is a potentially risky operation; make sure you have backups before proceeding!  Also, existing operating system installations may fail to boot after converting your partition table, so you may have to reinstall them (or just their bootloader if possible) in order for them to function again.


After updating to ''grub2-2.00-18.fc19'' you can return to a graphical grub2 configuration, if you like, and it should now work.
If you do not actually wish to perform a native UEFI installation, you should boot your installation medium in BIOS compatibility mode if your system firmware allows you to do so. Different firmwares present this capability in different ways, so we cannot provide definitive instructions. If you cannot see how to achieve this in your firmware, you can use an installation medium which is not compatible with UEFI-native booting: for instance, write a USB stick using the {{command|livecd-iso-to-disk}} tool without passing the <code>--efi</code> parameter. If all else fails, you can boot your installation medium in UEFI native mode, but pass the kernel parameter <code>noefi</code> when booting the installer: this should cause the installer to perform a BIOS-native installation instead of a UEFI-native installation.


== Installation issues ==
For Fedora 21, we intend to revise the installer to handle this situation in a better way. We apologize for any inconvenience it causes.
{{Anchor|deselect-litd-crash}}
=== Installation crash if you de-select all hard disks and click Done when running from a USB stick ===
<small>[[#deselect-litd-crash|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:959677|Bugzilla: #959677]]</small>


The Fedora 19 Beta installer has a bug which can cause it to crash with the error ''IndexError: list index out of range'' in a specific (but moderately commonly-encountered) circumstance. You will hit this crash if you:
{{Anchor|usb-target-filter}}


* Boot the installer from a USB stick written with livecd-iso-to-disk or (possibly) liveusb-creator
=== USB stick from which install is running appears as a possible install target ===
* Intentionally or otherwise de-select all hard disks on the Installation Destination screen and click ''Done''
<small>[[#usb-target-filter|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:874381|Bugzilla: #874381]]</small>


It is quite easy to inadvertently do this in Fedora 19 Beta as the design used to indicate selected disks on the Installation Destination spoke is somewhat confusing. A relatively small check mark indicates disks that are selected as install targets, and if you only have a single disk, it will be pre-selected for you. It is quite easy to hit this bug if you don't notice this, click the disk to 'select' it (in fact de-selecting it) and then click Done.
In some circumstances, when you are installing Fedora 19 from a USB stick, the stick itself will show up as a possible 'target disk' on the Installation Destination screen where you choose which disk(s) to install onto. This is not intended to happen. It is not possible to install to the USB stick from which the installation is running: if you attempt to do this, the installation will fail. Naturally, therefore, we recommend you simply avoid selecting the stick on this screen.


If you do hit the bug, it is quite safe to simply reboot and re-try the installation. Note that this bug cannot lead to any loss of pre-existing data. This bug does not affect installs from optical media, or from USB sticks written with 'dd' or analogous methods. The status of the bug with regard to USB sticks written with third-party utilities such as unetbootin is unknown, but in general, the bug will not occur if the USB stick from which you are running the installer shows as a potential target disk on the Installation Destination screen (which should never happen, but at present does happen for dd-written sticks). It may occur if the USB stick from which you are installing is (correctly) suppressed from being shown as a possible target device.
{{Anchor|multipath-missing-second}}
=== Multipath devices disappear from Installation Destination screen second time through ===
<small>[[#multipath-missing-second|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:955664|Bugzilla: #955664]]</small>


This issue should be resolved before the final release of Fedora 19.
If for any reason you visit the Installation Destination screen more than once during a Fedora 19 installation to a system with available multipath storage device(s), the multipath device(s) will show in the device list the first time through, but not on subsequent visits. You will still be able to find it by using the ''Add a disk...'' button, though, so you can continue with your installation.


{{Anchor|uefi-nvram-full}}
{{Anchor|extlinux-package-missing}}
=== UEFI install fails with ''BootLoaderError: failed to set new efi boot target'' ===
=== Hidden ''extlinux'' install option works only with network install ===
<small>[[#uefi-nvram-full|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:949786|Bugzilla: #949786]]</small>
<small>[[#extlinux-package-missing|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:970184|Bugzilla: #970184]]</small>


Some UEFI-native installations of Fedora 19 Beta may fail near the end of installation, with the error ''BootLoaderError: failed to set new efi boot target'' (or a similar error).
The feature [[Features/SyslinuxOption]] provides the Fedora 19 installer with a hidden (mostly undocumented) boot parameter ''extlinux''. If you pass this parameter, the installer will attempt to install the extlinux bootloader instead of grub2. However, this obviously requires extlinux to be available to the installer. During live and DVD-sourced installations, extlinux is not available, and any attempt to install with this parameter will fail with the error ''No such file or directory: '/mnt/sysimage/boot/extlinux/extlinux.conf'''. The parameter will work correctly when performing a network installation. So, if you intend to use this hidden feature of Fedora 19, use the non-live installer, and ensure network repositories (or at least some repository containing the {{package|extlinux}} package) is available to the installer.


Systems with UEFI firmwares contain a small amount of NVRAM (non-volatile RAM) storage, into which certain UEFI configuration and other data can be written by the firmware or by UEFI-native operating systems. This error usually indicates that the kernel considers the NVRAM storage area to be full, and is refusing to write anything to it when the Fedora installer attempts to write an EFI boot manager entry for the newly installed Fedora system.
{{Anchor|reboot-delay}}
=== Reboot after non-live install often delayed for a minute or so ===
<small>[[#reboot-delay|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:974383|Bugzilla: #974383]]</small>


In Fedora 19 Beta (in fact, in all recent kernel builds - this behaviour is not specific to Fedora, though it is very new), the kernel attempts not to write to the NVRAM storage when doing so may trigger the recently-publicised [http://mjg59.dreamwidth.org/22855.html bug in some Samsung firmwares], which causes the system firmware to fail if the NVRAM storage is more than 50% full. There are cases where this can interact badly with firmwares that do not do garbage collection very well, and you may therefore be affected by this problem even if your NVRAM storage area is not full and you do not use one of the affected Samsung firmwares. You may also, of course, actually have a full NVRAM storage area.
After successfully completing an installation of Fedora 19 from the DVD or network installation media, you will see a button to ''Reboot''. Sometimes, after you click this, the system will appear to hang at a console. In fact, the reboot process is just delayed; if you leave it for a minute or two, the system will reboot correctly. We do recommend you wait it out to avoid any possibility of filesystem damage, rather than forcing a reset.


If you are affected by this problem, there are several things you can try. The Fedora 19 Beta installer attempts to delete non-essential data from the NVRAM prior to writing a boot manager entry. However, it cannot force the firmware to do garbage collection after requesting the deletion. In some cases, several reboots may be required to trigger garbage collection. So the first thing to try if you are affected by this is to reboot the system several times, and then re-try the installation.
{{Anchor|checkmark-disk-select}}
=== 'Selected' state for disks is indicated with a small and easily missed check mark ===
<small>[[#checkmark-disk-select|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:967682|Bugzilla: #967682]]</small>


If that does not help, you may try resetting the firmware to defaults, or updating or reinstalling the firmware. However, note that doing so can reset the EFI boot manager to its default state, which may remove entries for any UEFI native operating systems you have installed!
On the installer screen where you choose which disks will be used for Fedora 19 installation, disks that are selected as installation targets are marked with a fairly small black check mark in the lower right hand corner; disks that are not selected do not have the check mark.


If all else fails, you may be forced to install Fedora 19 Beta in BIOS emulation mode rather than UEFI native mode.
This has been changed since Fedora 18, when disks that were selected were highlighted in blue, and now the blue highlight simply means the ''UI element'' is selected. So if you click on a disk that was previously selected as an install target, then you have just de-selected it - so the check mark goes away - but the UI element is active, so it is highlighted in blue.


We will continue to work on this issue to see if we can improve the situation in any way for the Final release.
Add to this that if you only have a single hard disk it will be pre-selected as an install target when you enter the page, and it has become clear that this design is confusing people. Many users have entered the screen and clicked to 'select' their single disk - in fact de-selecting it, because it was already selected, but not noticing the mistake.


Note for journalists: this issue has ''nothing at all to do with Secure Boot''. Please be careful in distinguishing Secure Boot from UEFI.
Please be aware that the check mark not the blue highlight indicates the disks selected as targets. We will endeavour to improve this interface before the release of Fedora 20.


{{Anchor|bootloader-password}}
{{Anchor|bootloader-password}}
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Lawrence Lowe [https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=840160#c14 suggests] that the --unrestricted parameter can be added to ''menuentry'' lines in the grub config file to make them available without the password being entered.
Lawrence Lowe [https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=840160#c14 suggests] that the --unrestricted parameter can be added to ''menuentry'' lines in the grub config file to make them available without the password being entered.
{{Anchor|initial-setup-everything}}
=== Non-GNOME initial setup utility always shows all actions ===
<small>[[#initial-setup-everything|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:963935|Bugzilla: #963935]]</small>
Fedora 19 includes a new {{package|initial-setup}} utility which replaces the old ''firstboot'' utility as the tool that runs on the first boot after installation to complete any necessary setup tasks before normal use of the system can commence. Note that there is an alternative - and completely different - {{package|gnome-initial-setup}} utility which is used instead of initial-setup on the Desktop spin and on installation of GNOME from the DVD or network install images; this bug does not affect GNOME installations, which use this other utility. (If you are not sure which one you are seeing, gnome-initial-setup is a wizard-type interface which starts by asking you to choose a language, while initial-setup looks almost identical to the installer interface).
In Fedora 19 Beta installations of any graphical desktop other than GNOME, the ''initial-setup'' utility always runs, and always displays all possible actions (set date and time, set root password, and create user accounts), no matter what actions you took during installation. It is intended that actions that are not necessary or useful should not be displayed; so for instance, if you created a root password and a user account, or an administrative user account, during installation, ''initial-setup'' should not really need to run at all, but this has not yet been implemented.
We recommend you use initial-setup only to create a user account if you did not create one during installation. If you did create a user account during installation, the best thing to do is simply to quit it as soon as it runs.


{{Anchor|initial-setup-user}}
{{Anchor|initial-setup-user}}
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<small>[[#initial-setup-user|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:965797|Bugzilla: #965797]]</small>
<small>[[#initial-setup-user|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:965797|Bugzilla: #965797]]</small>


In Fedora 19 Beta, the new initial-setup utility described in the [[#initial-setup-everything|previous entry]] does not present any kind of warning if you leave it without having created a user account either during installation or from initial-setup itself. Thus it is relatively easy to arrive at a graphical login screen without any user accounts available.
In Fedora 19, the new initial-setup utility (shown after a graphical install with any desktop other than GNOME if you do not create a user account during installation) does not present any kind of warning if you leave it without having created a user account. Thus it is relatively easy to arrive at a graphical login screen without any user accounts available.


The old utility would allow you to skip user account creation, but required you to click through a warning in order to do so, to ensure no-one did it inadvertently. This is also how initial-setup should behave.
The old utility would allow you to skip user account creation, but required you to click through a warning in order to do so, to ensure no-one did it inadvertently. This is also how initial-setup should behave.


We have tested that the desktops for which the new tool is used - KDE, Xfce, LXDE, MATE, and Sugar - all allow login as root; so this bug should not present any major roadblocks to accessing the installed system. However, if you do install without creating a user account, we '''strongly''' advise that you log in as root only in order to create a user account, and then immediately log out and in future always log in as the user account. Using a graphical desktop with root privileges can increase your vulnerability to remote attack, to simple mistakes having severe consequences, and to bugs caused by software not expecting to be run with root privileges.
We have tested that the desktops for which the new tool is used - KDE, Xfce, LXDE, MATE, and Sugar - all allow login as root, so this bug should not present any major roadblocks to accessing the installed system. However, if you do install without creating a user account, we '''strongly''' advise that you log in as root only in order to create a user account, and then immediately log out and in future always log in as the user account. Using a graphical desktop with root privileges can increase your vulnerability to remote attack, to simple mistakes having severe consequences, and to bugs caused by software not expecting to be run with root privileges.


This issue does not affect the GNOME initial setup utility: in fact, that utility will not allow you to skip user account creation at all.
This issue does not affect the GNOME initial setup utility: in fact, that utility will not allow you to skip user account creation at all.


This issue is expected to be resolved before the final release of Fedora 19.
{{Anchor|FedUp-boot-arguments}}
=== Fedup: upgrade to F19 can't start without rd.luks.uuid/rd.lvm.lv/rd.md.uuid boot args ===
<small>[[#FedUp-boot-arguments|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:974000|Bugzilla: #974000]]</small>
 
The system hangs during the reboot after running the command <code>fedup --network 19</code> from F18. F17 and F18 would boot without specifying 'rd.luks.uuid' or 'rd.lvm.lv' arguments, but F19 won't.
 
Under normal circumstances, the installer sets up those arguments for you, but some people who migrated from GRUB to GRUB2 by hand have *dropped* those arguments - which works fine for F17 and F18, but fails for F19.


== Upgrade issues ==
The recommended fix is to restore the rd.luks.uuid/rd.lvm.lv/etc. arguments from your old grub.cfg. In a pinch, you can add "rd.auto=1" to your boot arguments to make dracut try to automatically set up *every* disk it finds; this isn't recommended for general use though.
{{Anchor|fedup-reboot-hang}}
=== System hangs at the end of the process when upgrading to Fedora 19 with fedup ===
<small>[[#fedup-reboot-hang|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:957783|Bugzilla: #957783]]</small>


When upgrading to Fedora 19 using the recommended [[FedUp]] method, the system may hang at the end of the upgrade process, whereas it should automatically reboot into the upgraded system. The upgrade process has been completed at this point, and it is safe simply to force a reboot at this point. Barring unrelated issues, the upgraded system will be in place and working.
{{Anchor|kickstart-nopassword-unlock}}
=== Kickstart: if no password is specified for a user account, it will be unlocked ===
<small>[[#kickstart-nopassword-unlock|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:1063540|Bugzilla: #1063540]]</small>
 
In Fedora 19 (and 20), if you do a kickstart installation and your kickstart contains a ''user'' directive with no password, the user will be created as an unlocked account: it will be possible to log in to it with no password. This differs from previous releases and from the behaviour previously described on the wiki page (which has now been updated), where such an account would be created locked: impossible to log into.
 
To create a locked user account, explicitly specify the ''--lock'' parameter to the ''user'' directive in your kickstart file. It would be best practice to do this in any case, and not rely on the default behaviour being correct, as this case shows!
 
This issue will be resolved for future releases.


== Hardware issues ==
== Hardware issues ==
Line 149: Line 230:


The kernel developers plan to address this issue in a future kernel update by blacklisting X2APIC functionality on affected systems, when the NVIDIA adapter is in use.
The kernel developers plan to address this issue in a future kernel update by blacklisting X2APIC functionality on affected systems, when the NVIDIA adapter is in use.
{{Anchor|gdm-transition-fail}}
=== Transition from GDM to desktop fails on systems with old or no 3D graphics adapters ===
<small>[[#gdm-transition-fail|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:955779|Bugzilla: #955779]]</small>
Several users have reported a problem with logging in from GDM on systems with an old, or no, 3D graphics adapter (including virtual machines). This seems to affect some virtual setups, and older graphics adapters that are blacklisted from being used for 3D acceleration of GNOME Shell: pre-i915 Intel adapters, pre-R300 (Radeon 9500) Radeon adapters, and pre-NV30 (GeForce FX) NVIDIA adapters. The effect of the bug is that, after entering a username and password, the screen remains blank grey, never transitioning to the desktop. Some testers do not seem to be affected by the problem; we are yet to pin down precisely what is causing it.
If you are affected by the problem, the simplest solution is to switch to a different login manager. The best options are likely KDM and LightDM, as they have received the most testing with the widest range of desktops besides GDM. To switch to kdm or lightdm, simply install the {{package|kdm}} or {{package|lightdm}} package and run {{command|su -c 'systemctl disable gdm.service'}}. Then, run {{command|su -c 'systemctl enable kdm.service'}} or {{command|su -c 'systemctl enable lightdm.service'}} and reboot. You should see the new login manager, and you should be able to log in successfully with it.


== Software issues ==
== Software issues ==
{{Anchor|llvmpipe-sse2}}
{{Anchor|qxl-19on19-crash}}
=== GDM and GNOME render incorrectly on older systems ===
=== X may crash when using the qxl driver in a Fedora 19 virtual machine on a Fedora 19 host ===
<small>[[#llvmpipe-sse2|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:909473|Bugzilla: #909473]]</small>
<small>[[#qxl-19on19-crash|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:978612|Bugzilla: #978612]]</small>


Some testing has indicated that Fedora 19's llvmpipe-based software 3D rendering does not work properly on older CPUs (those without SSE2 or equivalent instructions; SSE2 was introduced by Intel with the Pentium 4 in 2001, and AMD added support for it with the introduction of the Opteron and Athlon 64 lines in 2003). If your graphics card is not sufficient for GNOME 3 - which may well be the case on older machines - Fedora will try and use software rendering to display GDM and GNOME, but due to this bug, it may fail entirely or render incorrectly. GNOME 3.8, as included in Fedora 19, no longer has a non-accelerated 'fallback mode' for use on systems where 3D acceleration does not work correctly.
Some testers have reported X.org crashes in Fedora 19 KVM virtual machines running on Fedora 19 hosts when using the qxl graphics driver. The issue seems to be triggered by a resolution change in the guest, but some testers have observed it happening during an installation from the KDE live image: we are not yet sure why. This issue does not seem to affect all testers, and seems to affect some worse than others.


At present the only workaround for this problem is to use a non-3D accelerated login manager and desktop. KDM is probably the most robust alternative login manager. The KDE, Xfce, LXDE and MATE desktops all work without 3D acceleration and would be possible alternatives to GNOME.
If you find yourself suffering from this issue, there are a couple of possible workarounds. You can configure your virtual machine to use the cirrus video adapter rather than qxl and the VNC display method rather than SPICE (though this may cause issues with GNOME Shell), or you can use the ''Basic graphics mode'' option from the Fedora 19 bootloader menu (or simply pass the parameter ''nomodeset'' on the kernel command line).


{{Anchor|i686-qxl-crash}}
An updated [https://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2013-11937/xorg-x11-drv-qxl-0.1.1-0.10.20130514git77a1594.fc19 xorg-x11-drv-qxl] package has been submitted to the updates-testing repository for testing. Users experiencing this problem are encouraged to test this update and [https://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2013-11937/xorg-x11-drv-qxl-0.1.1-0.10.20130514git77a1594.fc19 report to Bodhi] whether it solves the problem. To test the update, run this command:
=== System fails to start correctly (due to qxl driver crash) when booting 32-bit image in Fedora virtualization ===
<pre>su -c 'yum --enablerepo=updates-testing update xorg-x11-drv-qxl'</pre> and then reboot the guest system. Of course, this will not be useful for the initial installation of a Fedora 19 virtual machine: for that phase, try one of the workarounds mentioned above.
<small>[[#i686-qxl-crash|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:965101|Bugzilla: #965101]]</small>


Several testers have reported that, using Fedora's official virtualization stack (qemu-kvm/libvirt) with the virtual machine's video adapter set as 'qxl', if you boot a 32-bit Fedora 19 Beta image, the system will fail to boot correctly due to a crash in the {{package|xorg-x11-drv-qxl}} video driver.
{{Anchor|gnome-video-crash}}
=== Crash when GNOME introductory video attempts to play ===
<small>[[#gnome-video-crash|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:962092|Bugzilla: #962092]]</small>


As we do not support 32-bit systems as virtual hosts at all, there is a very simple workaround for this bug in all supported (i.e. 64-bit host) configurations: configure your guest with a 64-bit processor and boot a 64-bit Fedora 19 Beta image. If you absolutely must boot a 32-bit image for some reason, you can re-configure your virtual machine to use a different video adapter; the 'cirrus' or 'vga' models ought to work, although performance will likely be poor and there may be glitches in rendering of the GNOME desktop.
When a user logs into GNOME 3.8 (as included in Fedora 19) for the first time, a short introductory video is intended to play. Fedora 19 testing has indicated that, sometimes, there is a crash, and the video fails to play. On first login to a user account, you may notice a crash report for the ''/usr/libexec/gnome-initial-setup-player'' process. Aside from the crash report and the failure of the video to play, this bug appears to have no further consequences. We have not yet identified the circumstances under which the crash occurs.


{{Anchor|update-notification-online}}
{{Anchor|update-notification-online}}
Line 171: Line 261:
<small>[[#update-notification-online|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:863592|Bugzilla: #863592]]</small>
<small>[[#update-notification-online|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:863592|Bugzilla: #863592]]</small>


Fedora 18 introduced a feature called [[Features/OfflineSystemUpdates|offline system updates]]. Its description suggests that 'offline' updates - updates performed across a system reboot - are now the default method for graphical updating in Fedora 18, at least when using GNOME. However, the feature's implementation is still somewhat incomplete: GNOME will still pop up notifications of available updates, and if you click on these notifications as you are encouraged to do, the 'online' update process (updates installed within the running system) will be launched.
Fedora 18 introduced a feature called [[Features/OfflineSystemUpdates|offline system updates]]. Its description suggests that 'offline' updates - updates performed across a system reboot - are now the default method for graphical updating in Fedora 18 and later, at least when using GNOME. However, the feature's implementation is still somewhat incomplete: GNOME will still pop up notifications of available updates, and if you click on these notifications as you are encouraged to do, the 'online' update process (updates installed within the running system) will be launched.


This is not a major bug - the online update system still works, and while there are valid reasons why offline updates are slightly more robust, online updates are what Fedora used from Fedora Core 1 through Fedora 17 so there is no pressing reason to believe the use of online updates will be a disaster. Both mechanisms perform as intended in Fedora 19, and you can use the online update mechanism as safely in Fedora 19 as you ever did in a previous Fedora release. This note is included simply to explain the situation, in case you are confused as to what's going on.
This is not a major bug - the online update system still works, and while there are valid reasons why offline updates are slightly more robust, online updates are what Fedora used from Fedora Core 1 through Fedora 17 so there is no pressing reason to believe the use of online updates will be a disaster. Both mechanisms perform as intended in Fedora 19, and you can use the online update mechanism as safely in Fedora 19 as you ever did in a previous Fedora release. This note is included simply to explain the situation, in case you are confused as to what's going on.


If you want to trigger an offline update, use the "Install Updates and Restart" entry on the User menu.
If you want to trigger an offline update, use the "Install Updates and Restart" entry on the User menu.
{{Anchor|biosdevname-vs-systemd}}
=== ''biosdevname'' rather than systemd network interface names used by default ===
<small>[[#biosdevname-vs-systemd|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:965718|Bugzilla: #965718]]</small>
The [[Features/SystemdPredictableNetworkInterfaceNames|Systemd predictable network interface names]] Feature of Fedora 19 is supposed to mean that network interface names will be set by systemd/udev following the upstream [http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/PredictableNetworkInterfaceNames/ feature], rather than by the ''biosdevname'' tool which was introduced as part of the Fedora 15 [[Features/ConsistentNetworkDeviceNaming|consistent network device naming]] feature. The two systems have similar goals, but use different naming schemes.
In practice, as things have turned out with the final Fedora 19, the Fedora installer still uses ''biosdevname'', and writes the interface names produced by biosdevname into the configuration files for each interface. The {{package|biosdevname}} package is also still installed by default. We therefore expect that Fedora 19 will in fact mostly behave as if biosdevname is still the system in use, both on new installations and upgrades.
This should not cause any problems, but we felt the issue was worth noting in case the question arose as to why the new feature does not seem to be working, or in case certain corner cases appear in which the two systems conflict in some way.
{{Anchor|dvd-package-source}}
=== DVD not available as a package repository after installation ===
<small>[[#dvd-package-source|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:888307|Bugzilla: #888307]]</small>
In older releases of Fedora - at least older than Fedora 18 - after you installed from the DVD, it was automatically used as a repository for installing packages after system installation. Since Fedora 18, due to changes to the underlying tools, this function has no longer worked. We hope to be able to restore it soon, but cannot commit to a specific time frame.
A [https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=888307#c1 comment on the bug] provides a partial workaround which will allow you to install packages from the DVD using the {{command|yum}} utility.
{{Anchor|lxde-low-battery}}
=== Low battery warnings not showing up in LXDE live image ===
<small>[[#lxde-low-battery|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:975826|Bugzilla: #975826]]</small>
Fedora 19's original LXDE build relied on the {{command|xmessage}} tool for printing 'low battery' notifications. However, this tool is not included by default in the LXDE live image. This means that these notifications will not show up unless you manually install the {{package|xorg-x11-apps}} package. If it is important to you that you get low battery notifications when running the LXDE live image, please manually install the {{package|xorg-x11-apps}} package. This issue affects fresh installs of LXDE as well, but an updated lxpanel will pull in the required package, so simply updating your system as usual will resolve the issue.
{{Anchor|php-mysqlnd}}
=== PHP cannot connect to MariaDB/MySQL using old password ===
<small>[[#php-mysqlnd|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:991070|Bugzilla: #991070]]</small>
When a MariaDB/MySQL database contains old users, created with old unsecure passwords, PHP (using [http://php.net/mysqlnd mysqlnd] driver) won't be able to connect:
<pre>PHP Warning:  mysqli::mysqli(): (HY000/2000): mysqlnd cannot connect to MySQL 4.1+
using the old insecure authentication. Please use an administration tool to reset your
password with the command SET PASSWORD = PASSWORD('your_existing_password'). This will
store a new, and more secure, hash value in mysql.user. If this user is used in other
scripts executed by PHP 5.2 or earlier you might need to remove the old-passwords flag
from your my.cnf file ...</pre>
Which means, you MUST remove old_password=1 from /etc/my.cnf, restart MariaDB/MySQL service and set a new password for each user.
Old passwords are stored as 16 char hash (in mysql.user table), while new passwords are stored as 41 char hash (starting with a *).
{{Anchor|remmina}}
=== Remmina - Don't permit selection of share folder on KDE Desktop Environment ===
<small>[[#remmina|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:997592|Bugzilla: #997592]]</small>
After you start Remmina when you tried to select a local folder to share that folder on your rdp connection, the program closes and crash every time.
{{Anchor|yum-group-errors}}
=== Multiple cases of "group (groupname) does not exist" errors when running yum ===
<small>[[#yum-group-errors|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:1043207|Bugzilla: #1043207]] - [[rhbug:1014202|Bugzilla: #1014202]] - [[rhbug:1043221|Bugzilla: #1043221]] - [[rhbug:1043231|Bugzilla: #1043231]]</small>
{{Admon/tip|Update available for testing|An updated [https://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/yum-3.4.3-127.fc19 yum] package has been submitted to the updates-testing repository for testing. Users experiencing this problem are encouraged to test this update and [https://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/yum-3.4.3-127.fc19 report to Bodhi] whether it solves the problem. To test the update, run this command: <pre>su -c 'yum --enablerepo=updates-testing update yum'</pre>}}
There are several similar and inter-related bugs in Fedora 19's [[Yum]] package manager which can cause it to print bogus warnings about groups not existing in certain circumstances. You may see any of these warning messages:
* ''Warning: group (groupname) does not exist.''
* ''Warning: environment (groupname) does not exist.''
* ''Warning: Environment Group (groupname) does not exist.''
when running {{command|yum groupinstall (groupname)}}, {{command|yum install @(groupname)}}, or {{command|yum upgrade}} after having once installed any package or environment group with {{command|yum groupinstall (groupname)}} or {{command|yum install @(groupname)}}. The most common and most visible case of this bug - where you see multiple instances of the first warning - will occur only if you have updated to yum-3.4.3-111.fc19 or higher, it does not affect earlier Fedora 19 versions of yum.
A less immediately visible but somewhat more significant issue is that, when you install an "environment group", yum fails to correctly keep track of which "package groups" were installed as a part of that "environment group" - it in fact never considers any package group to have been installed as part of an environment group. This means that running "yum group remove (environment group)" will not remove anything.
We have not yet discovered any very serious consequences of these bugs - they are mostly superficial, though they can be annoying. As far as we are currently aware, there is no possibility of data loss, or of the packaging system becoming seriously broken. It is safe to continue using your Fedora 19 system and working with packages, even if you see these messages. Some of the more advanced group functions related to the [[Features/YumGroupsAsObjects|Fedora 19 "yum groups as objects"]] feature, however, will not perform as advertised.
Various 'workarounds' are possible, though all involve in some way interfering with the operation of the aforementioned [[Features/YumGroupsAsObjects|Fedora 19 "yum groups as objects"]] feature. Probably the safest and most easily reversible is to run:
<pre>
yum-config-manager --save --setopt=group_command=compat
</pre>
This will configure yum to effectively disable the "groups as objects" feature and revert to the simple handling of groups it used prior to Fedora 19. The major drawback of this is that the {{command|yum group remove}} command almost never does what you want in this configuration. Once the bugs discussed here are resolved, you can run:
<pre>
yum-config-manager --save --setopt=group_command=objects
</pre>
to return to "groups as objects" mode, if you wish. Another possible workaround is to run {{command|yum group mark remove (groupname)}} for each affected group. This is a little more work, and also harder to reverse in future, but it is safe. It tells yum to consider the group in question as 'not installed', but will not lead to the removal of any packages unless you run a specific command or change a configuration setting.
We will work to provide updates that permanently resolve these issues as quickly as possible.
{{Anchor|yum-mark-convert}}
=== ''yum groups mark convert'' command recommended by yum results in many additional packages being installed on ''yum update'' ===
<small>[[#yum-mark-convert|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:1043237|Bugzilla: #1043207]]</small>
{{Admon/tip|Update available for testing|An updated [https://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/yum-3.4.3-127.fc19 yum] package has been submitted to the updates-testing repository for testing. Users experiencing this problem are encouraged to test this update and [https://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/yum-3.4.3-127.fc19 report to Bodhi] whether it solves the problem. To test the update, run this command: <pre>su -c 'yum --enablerepo=updates-testing update yum'</pre>}}
If you run certain yum commands, it may advise you to run a command {{command|yum groups mark convert}}. This is related to the [[Features/YumGroupsAsObjects|Fedora 19 "yum groups as objects"]] feature: it is intended to look at an existing Fedora system, work out which package groups are installed, and write that information out for the use of the "groups as objects" feature.
Testing has indicated that this command is too aggressive in determining which package groups are installed, and marks for instance groups from which only a single package is present on the system as being 'installed', even if that package was actually installed individually or as part of another group. As one of the "groups as objects" features is that not-currently-installed packages from installed groups will be added when running {{command|yum upgrade}}, the result is that, on running {{command|yum upgrade}} after {{command|yum groups mark convert}}, yum will attempt to install many new packages, most of which you likely do not want.
If you have not yet run {{command|yum groups mark convert}}, we advise for the present that you do not do so, regardless of yum's suggestion. If you have run the command and wish to prevent yum trying to install additional packages, there are several possibilities.
The easiest is to run {{command|yum-config-manager --save --setopt<nowiki>=</nowiki>group_command<nowiki>=</nowiki>compat}}, which will have the effect of disabling the "groups as objects" functionality entirely, reverting yum to its pre-Fedora 19 handling of package groups. Unless you were interested in taking advantage of the "groups as objects" features, you will likely be happy with this behavior.
If you wish to try and maintain the "groups as objects" functionality (despite this bug and [[#yum-group-errors|the others discussed above]]), you can run {{command|yum group list installed hidden -v}} to print the list of groups that yum now believes is installed, and run {{command|yum group mark remove (groupname)}} to tell yum to consider a group as 'not installed'. Do this for each of the groups you do not want, until yum no longer wishes to install additional packages you do not want.
{{Anchor|preun-fail}}
=== yum reports duplicate packages installed, older version cannot be easily removed ===
<small>[[#preun-fail|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:989145|Bugzilla: #989145]] - [[rhbug:1028430|Bugzilla: #1028430]] - [[rhbug:1029006|Bugzilla: #1029006]] - [[rhbug:1017493|Bugzilla: #1017493]] - [[rhbug:905409|Bugzilla: #905409]] - [[rhbug:947267|Bugzilla: #947267]]</small>
This note covers a category of issues, rather than a specific bug.
The RPM packaging system used by Fedora allows the execution of scripts, often known in context as 'scriptlets', at various points during the process of installing, removing and updating packages. In this context, RPM considers 'updating' a package to consist of installing the new package and then removing the old package, as two separate operations (in fact, all installation operations are run, and then all removal operations are run). A package can specify scriptlets to run:
* Before the entire transaction of which its installation and/or removal will be a part (''%pretrans'')
* Before it is installed (''%pre'')
* After it is installed (''%post'')
* Before it is removed (''%preun'')
* After it is removed (''%postun'')
* After the entire transaction of which its installation and/or removal will be a part (''%posttrans'')
An idiosyncracy of this system is that it can lead to bugs that are almost impossible to fix entirely. In particular, the ''%preun'' stage is vulnerable to this. If a package is ever built with a broken ''%preun'' scriptlet, then the game is almost entirely lost: you cannot really 'fix' a broken ''%preun'' scriptlet with an update, because of when the scriptlet is executed. 'Updating' to the new package consists of installing the new package and removing the old one, and the broken ''%preun'' scriptlet will be executed on removal of the old package. Ironically, in fact, if a packager notices a broken ''%preun'' scriptlet and ships an update to fix it, the very act of installing the update that fixes the broken scriptlet will trigger the broken scriptlet. When scriptlet execution fails, RPM will abort immediately and still consider the affected package to be installed, although all its files have already been removed (or updated to the newer version if the package was being updated rather than removed).
Sometimes we are able to work around this with clever tricks like inserting a hack in a scriptlet that we know will be executed before the broken ''%preun'' scriptlet which somehow works around the error, but this is not always practical. In general, if you are unfortunate enough to install a package with a broken ''%preun'' scriptlet (or, in certain circumstances, another broken scriptlet), it is likely you will wind up with a duplicate package database entry whenever you come to update or remove that package.
If you have been affected by this class of bug and now have a 'duplicate' package installed that you are having difficulty removing, it can usually be resolved by running:
{{command|rpm -e --noscripts --justdb (packagename-version)}}
Package versions known to have been affected by this type of issue within the last three releases include the following, though this cannot be known to be an exhaustive list:
* [[rhbug:989145|kde-settings-kdm-19-23.fc19]]
* [[rhbug:1028430|nscd-2.17-13.fc19]]
* [[rhbug:1029006|lightdm-1.4.0-2.fc18]]
* [[rhbug:1017493|usbmuxd-1.0.8-10.fc19]]
* [[rhbug:905409|policycoreutils-restorecond-2.1.13-27.2.fc17]]
* [[rhbug:947627|transmission-2.77-1.fc17]]
== Resolved issues ==
{{Anchor|rhel-qxl-crash}}
=== System fails to start correctly (due to qxl driver crash) when booting Fedora 19 as a virtual guest on a RHEL 6 host ===
<small>[[#rhel-qxl-crash|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:952666|Bugzilla: #952666]]</small>
{{Admon/tip|Fix released|This issue was resolved by [http://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2013-1571.html Red Hat advisory 2013:1571-1], containing updated spice-server packages. This advisory was superseded by [http://rhn.redhat.com/errata/RHBA-2013-1819.html RHBA-2013:1819-1]. Updating your RHEL 6 host system according to your usual procedures should resolve this issue.}}
It was reported that the {{package|xorg-x11-drv-qxl}} driver in Fedora 19 crashed during X startup when trying to boot a Fedora 19 image in a virtual guest configured with qxl/SPICE graphics on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4 host. This likely affected earlier versions of RHEL 6, clones of RHEL 6 such as CentOS, and possibly very old (and unsupported) Fedora releases as well.
To work around this issue, you configure your guest to use cirrus/VNC or vga/VNC instead of qxl/SPICE. This is really a bug on the host side rather than the guest side, and updates for RHEL should be made available soon after Fedora 19's release that should resolve this problem.
{{Anchor|mate-caja-desktop}}
=== Several x-caja-desktop windows pop up on login to MATE desktop ===
<small>[[#mate-caja-desktop|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:886029|Bugzilla: #886029]]</small>
{{Admon/tip|Fix released|This issue was resolved by [https://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2013-23505/mate-file-manager-1.6.3-1.fc19 an update to mate-file-manager]. Updating your system according to your usual procedures should resolve this issue. Of course, the update cannot resolve the issue as it applies to the live image.}}
Sometimes (the bug is due to a race condition and hence unpredictable), on boot of the Fedora 19 MATE live image or login with a user account to the MATE desktop, several useless windows labelled ''x-caja-desktop'' will open up on the desktop.
The bug has no further consequences and it is quite safe to simply close the windows and continue using the system.
{{Anchor|vbox-32-guest}}
=== X crashed on Fedora 19 32-bit VirtualBox guests with Guest Additions installed ===
<small>[[#vbox-32-guest|link to this item]] - [[rhbug:972095|Bugzilla: #972095]]</small>
{{Admon/tip|Fix released|This issue was resolved by [https://admin.fedoraproject.org/updates/FEDORA-2013-12681/xorg-x11-server-1.14.2-3.fc19 an update to xorg-x11-server]. Updating your system according to your usual procedures should resolve this issue.}}
Several testers reported that if you installed a 32-bit edition of Fedora 19 to a VirtualBox virtual machine and installed the Guest Additions, X would no longer start up successfully.
To work around the issue, you could not install the Guest Additions, or install a 64-bit edition of Fedora 19 rather than a 32-bit edition.
[[Category:Common bugs]]

Latest revision as of 23:59, 14 March 2018


This page documents common bugs in Fedora 19 and, if available, fixes or workarounds for these problems. If you find your problem in this page, do not file a bug for it, unless otherwise instructed. Where appropriate, a reference to the current bug(s) in Bugzilla is included.

Release Notes

Read the F19_release_announcement and the Fedora 19 release notes for specific information about changes in Fedora 19 and other general information.

My bug is not listed

Not every bug is listed in this page, but Bugzilla should be a comprehensive database of known bugs. This page is a sampling of the bugs most commonly discussed on our mailing lists and forums.

To see if your bug has already been reported, you can search Bugzilla. If it has not yet been reported, we encourage you to do so to help improve Fedora for yourself and others. A guide to Bugs and feature requests has been prepared to assist you.

If you believe an already-reported bug report should be added to this page because it is commonly encountered, you can:

  • Add it yourself, if you have wiki access. Please follow the style and guidelines explained in the comments in the page source.
  • Or, add the CommonBugs keyword to the bug report. Someone from the QA team will then inspect the issue to determine whether the bug should be listed as a common bug. To expedite your request, please add a comment to the bug that includes
    1. a summary of the problem
    2. any known workarounds
    3. an assessment on the impact to Fedora users

For reference, you can query Bugzilla for bugs tagged CommonBugs:

  • CommonBugs? (bugs with CommonBugs keyword, but do not yet have a link to this page)
  • CommonBugs+(bugs with CommonBugs keyword and contain a link to this page)


Installation issues

Installer screens sometimes do not appear at full screen width

link to this item - Bugzilla: #869364

Sometimes when you visit a screen in the Fedora 19 installer (a 'spoke') more than once, it will display incorrectly - it will be squeezed into an area less than the full width of the screen, and sometimes less than the full height also. We have been attempting to fix this bug for a while but it is a difficult one to pin down.

Usually you can still use the screen in the reduced size version, though it may look very strange. If you get completely stuck, though, you will unfortunately be required to reboot and restart the installation process. We apologize for any inconvenience.

Sadly, we were unable to resolve this issue ahead of the final release of Fedora 19. We were unable to diagnose the cause of the issue, so without any idea how long it might take to fix or how difficult the fix may be, we could not consider adjusting the release schedule. We will attempt to make sure the issue is fixed for the release of Fedora 20.

Apple EFI Macs: EFI install alongside existing EFI installed OS (including OS X) results in you have not created a bootloader stage1 target device error

link to this item - Bugzilla: #1010495

If you try to do a native UEFI install of Fedora 19 alongside a native UEFI install of OS X and re-use the existing EFI system partition, the installer will incorrectly consider the existing EFI system partition as invalid and report that you have not created a bootloader stage1 target device. Unfortunately, the Fedora automatic partitioning algorithm will actually attempt to re-use the EFI system partition, and so you will run into this bug in any Fedora 19 installation attempt where you use the automatic partitioning algorithm and do not choose to delete the existing EFI system partition.

Practically speaking, there are a few different approaches to dealing with this problem. If you do not mind losing your OS X installation, you can simply choose to delete it (including the EFI system partition), and let Fedora occupy the rest of the disk. Fedora should create a new EFI system partition and install successfully.

If you wish to preserve your OS X installation, install Fedora 19 Final, and dual boot, you must use the installer's 'custom partitioning' path. Make sure to leave the existing EFI system partition intact, but do not set a mount point for it. Do not use the Create partitions for me button. Instead, manually create a new EFI system partition, and set it to be mounted at /boot/efi. Manually create other partitions as usual. Complete custom partitioning, and your installation should proceed successfully. See the Installation Guide for general instructions on the partitioning process, if necessary.

You could also try installing Fedora 18 or Fedora 19 Beta. These should allow you to use automatic partitioning to install alongside OS X, assuming you do not run into any other bugs they may have contained. You could then upgrade to Fedora 19 Final - with FedUp from Fedora 18, or yum from Fedora 19 Beta. You will still wind up with two EFI system partitions in this case.

We are investigating the possibility of producing an updates image to make it easier to deal with this bug. We apologize for any inconvenience it causes you.

Intel firmware RAID-1+ sets not visible in live installer

link to this item - Bugzilla: #975649

Fedora 19 testing indicates that Intel firmware RAID sets at level 1 and higher (so not level 0) fail to appear as potential target devices in the installer when running from a live image. They appear as normal when installing from a non-live image (the DVD or network installer).

This issue appears to be caused by mdmon failing to start or being killed during the live image start up. It may be possible to work around it by starting mdmon manually prior to running the installer. The other 'workaround' for the issue is simply to install from the DVD or network install image rather than a live image if you wish to install to an affected firmware RAID device.

Installer crashes with No such file or directory: '/dev/md' if MD-RAID set is referred to by device node name in /etc/fstab

link to this item - Bugzilla: #980267

If you attempt to install Fedora 19 on a system containing an existing Linux system whose /etc/fstab contains one or more entries referring to a partition on an MD-RAID set by its device node name (e.g. /dev/md0p1 or /dev/md127p2), the installer will likely crash, with the error No such file or directory: '/dev/md'.

Identifying any storage device by its device node name is fragile and it is usually a better idea to use something more robust such as a filesystem label or UUID, but it is of course a bug that the Fedora installer crashes when it encounters such a situation; it should handle it more gracefully.

To work around this issue, either adjust the /etc/fstab entry to refer to the device(s) by a more robust identifier, or temporarily comment them out while running the Fedora installation. The latter approach will have the minor drawback that Fedora will not be able to identify the device(s) as being part of any existing installation, and will instead display them in the 'Unknown' group of the Custom Partitioning screen, if you visit it during your installation.

Problems with Installation Source and Installation Destination spokes when installing from a partially complete kickstart

link to this item - Bugzilla: #972265 - Bugzilla: #972266

If you attempt to install Fedora 19 using a partially-complete kickstart - in particular, a kickstart which specifies a package set but no installation source or destination - you will find that the interactive process for setting those options behaves strangely. On the Installation Source spoke, you may not be able to use the default Closest mirror option. If you are affected by this problem, you can manually enter the URL of the Fedora 19 mirror list, and check the This URL refers to a mirror list. box. The URLs for the 64-bit and 32-bit mirror lists are https://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/mirrorlist?repo=fedora-19&arch=x86_64 and https://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/mirrorlist?repo=fedora-19&arch=i386 respectively.

The Installation Destination spoke appears to require you to complete it multiple times to complete configuration: each time it will set another element of the configuration. Even after doing this, you may find a bootloader target disk is not selected. To set one, first enter the Full disk summary and bootloader... screen and select not to install a bootloader, and complete the spoke once again. Then complete the spoke one more time, this time selecting the correct target disk for the bootloader, and the configuration should now be complete.

As these issues take some effort to work around, it may be a better idea simply to use a complete kickstart, or at least one which specifies an installation source and destination. The Anaconda/Kickstart page should help you with the required syntax.

Storage devices without media show as 0-byte partitions and can crash the installer

link to this item - Bugzilla: #960794

Several testers have reported an unusual case with certain storage devices in the Fedora 19 installer. Some devices report themselves to the kernel as drives with 'no media present'. Identified cases so far include an Android-based phone when plugged into the system but not set in USB storage mode, and a few types of card reader when no card is inserted.

If such a device is present during installation, it will not be shown in the 'Installation Destination' screen's list of disks, but if you enter the custom partitioning mode, the device will appear as a single 0-byte partition. If you attempt to manipulate this partition in any way, the installer may crash with an error AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'type' .

There are two obvious workarounds for this issue. In most cases it should be possible simply to disconnect the offending device: there is no need to connect your phone or external card reader during installation. If the offending device is not easily removable, you can simply leave the bogus 0-byte 'partition' entirely alone, and your installation should proceed successfully.

Network installation with Authoring and Publishing group selected fails

link to this item - Bugzilla: #959696

Due to an unmarked conflict between two texlive-related packages (ht and texlive-tex4ht-bin), Fedora 19 installations with the Authoring and Publishing package group selected (and possibly with the Font design group selected) will fail.

The offending packages (and groups) are not present on the Fedora 19 DVD, so the bug is not present there. The issue affects only network installs. It will be resolved once the conflict between the two packages is fixed with an update, so long as you enable the updates repository in your installation.

UEFI install to ms-dos ('MBR') labelled disk fails with unclear errors

link to this item - Bugzilla: #978430

As veterans of the Fedora 16 release may remember, there are two commonly-used 'disk label' or 'partition table' formats known as 'gpt' and 'ms-dos' or 'mbr'.

Fedora 19's installer effectively requires that native UEFI installations be performed to a disk with the 'gpt' format (in fact, it requires that the EFI system partition be on such a disk). In fact, this is not a requirement of the official UEFI specification: it leaves open the possibility of an EFI system partition residing on an ms-dos labelled disk, though it is possible that some firmwares may not support such a configuration.

In any case, if you attempt to do a native UEFI install of Fedora 19 such that the EFI system partition will reside on an ms-dos labelled disk, this will fail. You are likely get an error of the form you have not created a bootloader stage1 target device, possibly with the note that the volume backing the EFI system partition must have one of the following disklabel types: gpt. You may also observe unusual behaviour on the Reclaim space screen, if you use it in your installation attempt. Note that you can encounter this error message even when installing to a gpt-labelled disk if you use custom partitioning and fail to correctly configure an EFI system partition: when doing a UEFI install you must include a partition of the 'EFI system partition' type, and mount it at the path /boot/efi.

We have found that there appear to be some systems 'in the wild' with existing native UEFI operating system installations to an ms-dos labelled drive. Unfortunately, this bug means you cannot install Fedora 19 in a dual-boot configuration to the same drive as such an operating system. You would need to install to a second drive in order to dual boot.

If you wish to do a native UEFI installation of Fedora 19, it must be to a gpt-labelled disk, or you must configure your installation such that all existing partitions on the disk on which the EFI system partition will reside will be deleted (doing this will cause the installer to reformat it with a gpt disk label). Note that it is not possible to change the label format of a disk in a non-destructive way with the installer: it requires a complete re-format.

You can, however, convert it using the gdisk utility from a live image prior to running the installer. Simply invoke gdisk as root using your hard disk device as the first argument (e.g. su -c 'gdisk /dev/sda') and it will offer to convert the partition table for you. After answering "yes", type w and press Enter to commit the changes to disk, then type q and press Enter to exit gdisk. Please note that conversion is a potentially risky operation; make sure you have backups before proceeding! Also, existing operating system installations may fail to boot after converting your partition table, so you may have to reinstall them (or just their bootloader if possible) in order for them to function again.

If you do not actually wish to perform a native UEFI installation, you should boot your installation medium in BIOS compatibility mode if your system firmware allows you to do so. Different firmwares present this capability in different ways, so we cannot provide definitive instructions. If you cannot see how to achieve this in your firmware, you can use an installation medium which is not compatible with UEFI-native booting: for instance, write a USB stick using the livecd-iso-to-disk tool without passing the --efi parameter. If all else fails, you can boot your installation medium in UEFI native mode, but pass the kernel parameter noefi when booting the installer: this should cause the installer to perform a BIOS-native installation instead of a UEFI-native installation.

For Fedora 21, we intend to revise the installer to handle this situation in a better way. We apologize for any inconvenience it causes.

USB stick from which install is running appears as a possible install target

link to this item - Bugzilla: #874381

In some circumstances, when you are installing Fedora 19 from a USB stick, the stick itself will show up as a possible 'target disk' on the Installation Destination screen where you choose which disk(s) to install onto. This is not intended to happen. It is not possible to install to the USB stick from which the installation is running: if you attempt to do this, the installation will fail. Naturally, therefore, we recommend you simply avoid selecting the stick on this screen.

Multipath devices disappear from Installation Destination screen second time through

link to this item - Bugzilla: #955664

If for any reason you visit the Installation Destination screen more than once during a Fedora 19 installation to a system with available multipath storage device(s), the multipath device(s) will show in the device list the first time through, but not on subsequent visits. You will still be able to find it by using the Add a disk... button, though, so you can continue with your installation.

Hidden extlinux install option works only with network install

link to this item - Bugzilla: #970184

The feature Features/SyslinuxOption provides the Fedora 19 installer with a hidden (mostly undocumented) boot parameter extlinux. If you pass this parameter, the installer will attempt to install the extlinux bootloader instead of grub2. However, this obviously requires extlinux to be available to the installer. During live and DVD-sourced installations, extlinux is not available, and any attempt to install with this parameter will fail with the error No such file or directory: '/mnt/sysimage/boot/extlinux/extlinux.conf'. The parameter will work correctly when performing a network installation. So, if you intend to use this hidden feature of Fedora 19, use the non-live installer, and ensure network repositories (or at least some repository containing the extlinux package) is available to the installer.

Reboot after non-live install often delayed for a minute or so

link to this item - Bugzilla: #974383

After successfully completing an installation of Fedora 19 from the DVD or network installation media, you will see a button to Reboot. Sometimes, after you click this, the system will appear to hang at a console. In fact, the reboot process is just delayed; if you leave it for a minute or two, the system will reboot correctly. We do recommend you wait it out to avoid any possibility of filesystem damage, rather than forcing a reset.

'Selected' state for disks is indicated with a small and easily missed check mark

link to this item - Bugzilla: #967682

On the installer screen where you choose which disks will be used for Fedora 19 installation, disks that are selected as installation targets are marked with a fairly small black check mark in the lower right hand corner; disks that are not selected do not have the check mark.

This has been changed since Fedora 18, when disks that were selected were highlighted in blue, and now the blue highlight simply means the UI element is selected. So if you click on a disk that was previously selected as an install target, then you have just de-selected it - so the check mark goes away - but the UI element is active, so it is highlighted in blue.

Add to this that if you only have a single hard disk it will be pre-selected as an install target when you enter the page, and it has become clear that this design is confusing people. Many users have entered the screen and clicked to 'select' their single disk - in fact de-selecting it, because it was already selected, but not noticing the mistake.

Please be aware that the check mark not the blue highlight indicates the disks selected as targets. We will endeavour to improve this interface before the release of Fedora 20.

Bootloader password is required on each boot

link to this item - Bugzilla: #840160

If you set a bootloader password during installation of Fedora 19 (which is only possible when doing a kickstart-based install), the password will be required at each boot of the system. This is a change in behaviour from Fedora 15 and earlier, where the password was required only to change settings from within the bootloader.

Lawrence Lowe suggests that the --unrestricted parameter can be added to menuentry lines in the grub config file to make them available without the password being entered.

Non-GNOME initial setup utility does not warn of failure to create a user account

link to this item - Bugzilla: #965797

In Fedora 19, the new initial-setup utility (shown after a graphical install with any desktop other than GNOME if you do not create a user account during installation) does not present any kind of warning if you leave it without having created a user account. Thus it is relatively easy to arrive at a graphical login screen without any user accounts available.

The old utility would allow you to skip user account creation, but required you to click through a warning in order to do so, to ensure no-one did it inadvertently. This is also how initial-setup should behave.

We have tested that the desktops for which the new tool is used - KDE, Xfce, LXDE, MATE, and Sugar - all allow login as root, so this bug should not present any major roadblocks to accessing the installed system. However, if you do install without creating a user account, we strongly advise that you log in as root only in order to create a user account, and then immediately log out and in future always log in as the user account. Using a graphical desktop with root privileges can increase your vulnerability to remote attack, to simple mistakes having severe consequences, and to bugs caused by software not expecting to be run with root privileges.

This issue does not affect the GNOME initial setup utility: in fact, that utility will not allow you to skip user account creation at all.

Fedup: upgrade to F19 can't start without rd.luks.uuid/rd.lvm.lv/rd.md.uuid boot args

link to this item - Bugzilla: #974000

The system hangs during the reboot after running the command fedup --network 19 from F18. F17 and F18 would boot without specifying 'rd.luks.uuid' or 'rd.lvm.lv' arguments, but F19 won't.

Under normal circumstances, the installer sets up those arguments for you, but some people who migrated from GRUB to GRUB2 by hand have *dropped* those arguments - which works fine for F17 and F18, but fails for F19.

The recommended fix is to restore the rd.luks.uuid/rd.lvm.lv/etc. arguments from your old grub.cfg. In a pinch, you can add "rd.auto=1" to your boot arguments to make dracut try to automatically set up *every* disk it finds; this isn't recommended for general use though.

Kickstart: if no password is specified for a user account, it will be unlocked

link to this item - Bugzilla: #1063540

In Fedora 19 (and 20), if you do a kickstart installation and your kickstart contains a user directive with no password, the user will be created as an unlocked account: it will be possible to log in to it with no password. This differs from previous releases and from the behaviour previously described on the wiki page (which has now been updated), where such an account would be created locked: impossible to log into.

To create a locked user account, explicitly specify the --lock parameter to the user directive in your kickstart file. It would be best practice to do this in any case, and not rely on the default behaviour being correct, as this case shows!

This issue will be resolved for future releases.

Hardware issues

Boot hangs when using NVIDIA discrete graphics on some Thinkpad models (W520, T420)

link to this item - Bugzilla: #752613 Kernel bugzilla: #43054

Multiple testers have reported that various Thinkpad models - including at least the W520 and T420 - that have hybrid Intel/NVIDIA graphics will fail to boot Fedora 19 when using the discrete NVIDIA graphics adapter. Using the onboard Intel adapter, Fedora will boot successfully.

Further testing indicates that this bug is an interaction between several features of these systems and of Fedora: the VT-d advanced virtualization feature, the X2APIC level APIC, and the NVIDIA adapter. If all three of these things are used together, boot fails. If any one is removed from the equation, boot succeeds.

So if you are affected by this bug, you can choose to boot with any two of those things, but not all three together. You can disable the VT-d feature and select which graphics adapter to use through the system firmware. You can disable X2APIC functionality by passing the kernel parameter nox2apic. In this way, you should be able to determine which of the features you want to use.

The kernel developers plan to address this issue in a future kernel update by blacklisting X2APIC functionality on affected systems, when the NVIDIA adapter is in use.

Transition from GDM to desktop fails on systems with old or no 3D graphics adapters

link to this item - Bugzilla: #955779

Several users have reported a problem with logging in from GDM on systems with an old, or no, 3D graphics adapter (including virtual machines). This seems to affect some virtual setups, and older graphics adapters that are blacklisted from being used for 3D acceleration of GNOME Shell: pre-i915 Intel adapters, pre-R300 (Radeon 9500) Radeon adapters, and pre-NV30 (GeForce FX) NVIDIA adapters. The effect of the bug is that, after entering a username and password, the screen remains blank grey, never transitioning to the desktop. Some testers do not seem to be affected by the problem; we are yet to pin down precisely what is causing it.

If you are affected by the problem, the simplest solution is to switch to a different login manager. The best options are likely KDM and LightDM, as they have received the most testing with the widest range of desktops besides GDM. To switch to kdm or lightdm, simply install the kdm or lightdm package and run su -c 'systemctl disable gdm.service'. Then, run su -c 'systemctl enable kdm.service' or su -c 'systemctl enable lightdm.service' and reboot. You should see the new login manager, and you should be able to log in successfully with it.

Software issues

X may crash when using the qxl driver in a Fedora 19 virtual machine on a Fedora 19 host

link to this item - Bugzilla: #978612

Some testers have reported X.org crashes in Fedora 19 KVM virtual machines running on Fedora 19 hosts when using the qxl graphics driver. The issue seems to be triggered by a resolution change in the guest, but some testers have observed it happening during an installation from the KDE live image: we are not yet sure why. This issue does not seem to affect all testers, and seems to affect some worse than others.

If you find yourself suffering from this issue, there are a couple of possible workarounds. You can configure your virtual machine to use the cirrus video adapter rather than qxl and the VNC display method rather than SPICE (though this may cause issues with GNOME Shell), or you can use the Basic graphics mode option from the Fedora 19 bootloader menu (or simply pass the parameter nomodeset on the kernel command line).

An updated xorg-x11-drv-qxl package has been submitted to the updates-testing repository for testing. Users experiencing this problem are encouraged to test this update and report to Bodhi whether it solves the problem. To test the update, run this command:

su -c 'yum --enablerepo=updates-testing update xorg-x11-drv-qxl'

and then reboot the guest system. Of course, this will not be useful for the initial installation of a Fedora 19 virtual machine: for that phase, try one of the workarounds mentioned above.

Crash when GNOME introductory video attempts to play

link to this item - Bugzilla: #962092

When a user logs into GNOME 3.8 (as included in Fedora 19) for the first time, a short introductory video is intended to play. Fedora 19 testing has indicated that, sometimes, there is a crash, and the video fails to play. On first login to a user account, you may notice a crash report for the /usr/libexec/gnome-initial-setup-player process. Aside from the crash report and the failure of the video to play, this bug appears to have no further consequences. We have not yet identified the circumstances under which the crash occurs.

"Updates available" notification runs online updater

link to this item - Bugzilla: #863592

Fedora 18 introduced a feature called offline system updates. Its description suggests that 'offline' updates - updates performed across a system reboot - are now the default method for graphical updating in Fedora 18 and later, at least when using GNOME. However, the feature's implementation is still somewhat incomplete: GNOME will still pop up notifications of available updates, and if you click on these notifications as you are encouraged to do, the 'online' update process (updates installed within the running system) will be launched.

This is not a major bug - the online update system still works, and while there are valid reasons why offline updates are slightly more robust, online updates are what Fedora used from Fedora Core 1 through Fedora 17 so there is no pressing reason to believe the use of online updates will be a disaster. Both mechanisms perform as intended in Fedora 19, and you can use the online update mechanism as safely in Fedora 19 as you ever did in a previous Fedora release. This note is included simply to explain the situation, in case you are confused as to what's going on.

If you want to trigger an offline update, use the "Install Updates and Restart" entry on the User menu.

biosdevname rather than systemd network interface names used by default

link to this item - Bugzilla: #965718

The Systemd predictable network interface names Feature of Fedora 19 is supposed to mean that network interface names will be set by systemd/udev following the upstream feature, rather than by the biosdevname tool which was introduced as part of the Fedora 15 consistent network device naming feature. The two systems have similar goals, but use different naming schemes.

In practice, as things have turned out with the final Fedora 19, the Fedora installer still uses biosdevname, and writes the interface names produced by biosdevname into the configuration files for each interface. The biosdevname package is also still installed by default. We therefore expect that Fedora 19 will in fact mostly behave as if biosdevname is still the system in use, both on new installations and upgrades.

This should not cause any problems, but we felt the issue was worth noting in case the question arose as to why the new feature does not seem to be working, or in case certain corner cases appear in which the two systems conflict in some way.

DVD not available as a package repository after installation

link to this item - Bugzilla: #888307

In older releases of Fedora - at least older than Fedora 18 - after you installed from the DVD, it was automatically used as a repository for installing packages after system installation. Since Fedora 18, due to changes to the underlying tools, this function has no longer worked. We hope to be able to restore it soon, but cannot commit to a specific time frame.

A comment on the bug provides a partial workaround which will allow you to install packages from the DVD using the yum utility.

Low battery warnings not showing up in LXDE live image

link to this item - Bugzilla: #975826

Fedora 19's original LXDE build relied on the xmessage tool for printing 'low battery' notifications. However, this tool is not included by default in the LXDE live image. This means that these notifications will not show up unless you manually install the xorg-x11-apps package. If it is important to you that you get low battery notifications when running the LXDE live image, please manually install the xorg-x11-apps package. This issue affects fresh installs of LXDE as well, but an updated lxpanel will pull in the required package, so simply updating your system as usual will resolve the issue.

PHP cannot connect to MariaDB/MySQL using old password

link to this item - Bugzilla: #991070

When a MariaDB/MySQL database contains old users, created with old unsecure passwords, PHP (using mysqlnd driver) won't be able to connect:

PHP Warning:  mysqli::mysqli(): (HY000/2000): mysqlnd cannot connect to MySQL 4.1+
using the old insecure authentication. Please use an administration tool to reset your
password with the command SET PASSWORD = PASSWORD('your_existing_password'). This will
store a new, and more secure, hash value in mysql.user. If this user is used in other
scripts executed by PHP 5.2 or earlier you might need to remove the old-passwords flag
from your my.cnf file ...

Which means, you MUST remove old_password=1 from /etc/my.cnf, restart MariaDB/MySQL service and set a new password for each user.

Old passwords are stored as 16 char hash (in mysql.user table), while new passwords are stored as 41 char hash (starting with a *).

Remmina - Don't permit selection of share folder on KDE Desktop Environment

link to this item - Bugzilla: #997592

After you start Remmina when you tried to select a local folder to share that folder on your rdp connection, the program closes and crash every time.

Multiple cases of "group (groupname) does not exist" errors when running yum

link to this item - Bugzilla: #1043207 - Bugzilla: #1014202 - Bugzilla: #1043221 - Bugzilla: #1043231

Update available for testing
An updated yum package has been submitted to the updates-testing repository for testing. Users experiencing this problem are encouraged to test this update and report to Bodhi whether it solves the problem. To test the update, run this command:
su -c 'yum --enablerepo=updates-testing update yum'

There are several similar and inter-related bugs in Fedora 19's Yum package manager which can cause it to print bogus warnings about groups not existing in certain circumstances. You may see any of these warning messages:

  • Warning: group (groupname) does not exist.
  • Warning: environment (groupname) does not exist.
  • Warning: Environment Group (groupname) does not exist.

when running yum groupinstall (groupname), yum install @(groupname), or yum upgrade after having once installed any package or environment group with yum groupinstall (groupname) or yum install @(groupname). The most common and most visible case of this bug - where you see multiple instances of the first warning - will occur only if you have updated to yum-3.4.3-111.fc19 or higher, it does not affect earlier Fedora 19 versions of yum.

A less immediately visible but somewhat more significant issue is that, when you install an "environment group", yum fails to correctly keep track of which "package groups" were installed as a part of that "environment group" - it in fact never considers any package group to have been installed as part of an environment group. This means that running "yum group remove (environment group)" will not remove anything.

We have not yet discovered any very serious consequences of these bugs - they are mostly superficial, though they can be annoying. As far as we are currently aware, there is no possibility of data loss, or of the packaging system becoming seriously broken. It is safe to continue using your Fedora 19 system and working with packages, even if you see these messages. Some of the more advanced group functions related to the Fedora 19 "yum groups as objects" feature, however, will not perform as advertised.

Various 'workarounds' are possible, though all involve in some way interfering with the operation of the aforementioned Fedora 19 "yum groups as objects" feature. Probably the safest and most easily reversible is to run:

yum-config-manager --save --setopt=group_command=compat

This will configure yum to effectively disable the "groups as objects" feature and revert to the simple handling of groups it used prior to Fedora 19. The major drawback of this is that the yum group remove command almost never does what you want in this configuration. Once the bugs discussed here are resolved, you can run:

yum-config-manager --save --setopt=group_command=objects

to return to "groups as objects" mode, if you wish. Another possible workaround is to run yum group mark remove (groupname) for each affected group. This is a little more work, and also harder to reverse in future, but it is safe. It tells yum to consider the group in question as 'not installed', but will not lead to the removal of any packages unless you run a specific command or change a configuration setting.

We will work to provide updates that permanently resolve these issues as quickly as possible.

yum groups mark convert command recommended by yum results in many additional packages being installed on yum update

link to this item - Bugzilla: #1043207

Update available for testing
An updated yum package has been submitted to the updates-testing repository for testing. Users experiencing this problem are encouraged to test this update and report to Bodhi whether it solves the problem. To test the update, run this command:
su -c 'yum --enablerepo=updates-testing update yum'

If you run certain yum commands, it may advise you to run a command yum groups mark convert. This is related to the Fedora 19 "yum groups as objects" feature: it is intended to look at an existing Fedora system, work out which package groups are installed, and write that information out for the use of the "groups as objects" feature.

Testing has indicated that this command is too aggressive in determining which package groups are installed, and marks for instance groups from which only a single package is present on the system as being 'installed', even if that package was actually installed individually or as part of another group. As one of the "groups as objects" features is that not-currently-installed packages from installed groups will be added when running yum upgrade, the result is that, on running yum upgrade after yum groups mark convert, yum will attempt to install many new packages, most of which you likely do not want.

If you have not yet run yum groups mark convert, we advise for the present that you do not do so, regardless of yum's suggestion. If you have run the command and wish to prevent yum trying to install additional packages, there are several possibilities.

The easiest is to run yum-config-manager --save --setopt=group_command=compat, which will have the effect of disabling the "groups as objects" functionality entirely, reverting yum to its pre-Fedora 19 handling of package groups. Unless you were interested in taking advantage of the "groups as objects" features, you will likely be happy with this behavior.

If you wish to try and maintain the "groups as objects" functionality (despite this bug and the others discussed above), you can run yum group list installed hidden -v to print the list of groups that yum now believes is installed, and run yum group mark remove (groupname) to tell yum to consider a group as 'not installed'. Do this for each of the groups you do not want, until yum no longer wishes to install additional packages you do not want.

yum reports duplicate packages installed, older version cannot be easily removed

link to this item - Bugzilla: #989145 - Bugzilla: #1028430 - Bugzilla: #1029006 - Bugzilla: #1017493 - Bugzilla: #905409 - Bugzilla: #947267

This note covers a category of issues, rather than a specific bug.

The RPM packaging system used by Fedora allows the execution of scripts, often known in context as 'scriptlets', at various points during the process of installing, removing and updating packages. In this context, RPM considers 'updating' a package to consist of installing the new package and then removing the old package, as two separate operations (in fact, all installation operations are run, and then all removal operations are run). A package can specify scriptlets to run:

  • Before the entire transaction of which its installation and/or removal will be a part (%pretrans)
  • Before it is installed (%pre)
  • After it is installed (%post)
  • Before it is removed (%preun)
  • After it is removed (%postun)
  • After the entire transaction of which its installation and/or removal will be a part (%posttrans)

An idiosyncracy of this system is that it can lead to bugs that are almost impossible to fix entirely. In particular, the %preun stage is vulnerable to this. If a package is ever built with a broken %preun scriptlet, then the game is almost entirely lost: you cannot really 'fix' a broken %preun scriptlet with an update, because of when the scriptlet is executed. 'Updating' to the new package consists of installing the new package and removing the old one, and the broken %preun scriptlet will be executed on removal of the old package. Ironically, in fact, if a packager notices a broken %preun scriptlet and ships an update to fix it, the very act of installing the update that fixes the broken scriptlet will trigger the broken scriptlet. When scriptlet execution fails, RPM will abort immediately and still consider the affected package to be installed, although all its files have already been removed (or updated to the newer version if the package was being updated rather than removed).

Sometimes we are able to work around this with clever tricks like inserting a hack in a scriptlet that we know will be executed before the broken %preun scriptlet which somehow works around the error, but this is not always practical. In general, if you are unfortunate enough to install a package with a broken %preun scriptlet (or, in certain circumstances, another broken scriptlet), it is likely you will wind up with a duplicate package database entry whenever you come to update or remove that package.

If you have been affected by this class of bug and now have a 'duplicate' package installed that you are having difficulty removing, it can usually be resolved by running:

rpm -e --noscripts --justdb (packagename-version)

Package versions known to have been affected by this type of issue within the last three releases include the following, though this cannot be known to be an exhaustive list:

Resolved issues

System fails to start correctly (due to qxl driver crash) when booting Fedora 19 as a virtual guest on a RHEL 6 host

link to this item - Bugzilla: #952666

Fix released
This issue was resolved by Red Hat advisory 2013:1571-1, containing updated spice-server packages. This advisory was superseded by RHBA-2013:1819-1. Updating your RHEL 6 host system according to your usual procedures should resolve this issue.

It was reported that the xorg-x11-drv-qxl driver in Fedora 19 crashed during X startup when trying to boot a Fedora 19 image in a virtual guest configured with qxl/SPICE graphics on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.4 host. This likely affected earlier versions of RHEL 6, clones of RHEL 6 such as CentOS, and possibly very old (and unsupported) Fedora releases as well.

To work around this issue, you configure your guest to use cirrus/VNC or vga/VNC instead of qxl/SPICE. This is really a bug on the host side rather than the guest side, and updates for RHEL should be made available soon after Fedora 19's release that should resolve this problem.

Several x-caja-desktop windows pop up on login to MATE desktop

link to this item - Bugzilla: #886029

Fix released
This issue was resolved by an update to mate-file-manager. Updating your system according to your usual procedures should resolve this issue. Of course, the update cannot resolve the issue as it applies to the live image.

Sometimes (the bug is due to a race condition and hence unpredictable), on boot of the Fedora 19 MATE live image or login with a user account to the MATE desktop, several useless windows labelled x-caja-desktop will open up on the desktop.

The bug has no further consequences and it is quite safe to simply close the windows and continue using the system.

X crashed on Fedora 19 32-bit VirtualBox guests with Guest Additions installed

link to this item - Bugzilla: #972095

Fix released
This issue was resolved by an update to xorg-x11-server. Updating your system according to your usual procedures should resolve this issue.

Several testers reported that if you installed a 32-bit edition of Fedora 19 to a VirtualBox virtual machine and installed the Guest Additions, X would no longer start up successfully.

To work around the issue, you could not install the Guest Additions, or install a 64-bit edition of Fedora 19 rather than a 32-bit edition.