06-15-2013
Have you tried specifying the block device you want to work with, instead of allowing it to scan? The bug report indicates that as a workaround.
gparted is a front-end to parted. Perhaps calling the backend directly offers you more control? For more info, man parted may be useful. (Disclaimer: I don't use [g]parted.)
Alternatively, you can try a different partition table editing program, such as fdisk followed by the appropriate filesystem creation command (some variant of mkfs, I imagine).
Regards,
Alister
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LEARN ABOUT PHP
array_replace_recursive
ARRAY_REPLACE_RECURSIVE(3) 1 ARRAY_REPLACE_RECURSIVE(3)
array_replace_recursive - Replaces elements from passed arrays into the first array recursively
SYNOPSIS
array array_replace_recursive (array $array1, array $array2, [array $...])
DESCRIPTION
array_replace_recursive(3) replaces the values of $array1 with the same values from all the following arrays. If a key from the first array
exists in the second array, its value will be replaced by the value from the second array. If the key exists in the second array, and not
the first, it will be created in the first array. If a key only exists in the first array, it will be left as is. If several arrays are
passed for replacement, they will be processed in order, the later array overwriting the previous values.
array_replace_recursive(3) is recursive : it will recurse into arrays and apply the same process to the inner value.
When the value in $array1 is scalar, it will be replaced by the value in $array2, may it be scalar or array. When the value in $array1 and
$array2 are both arrays, array_replace_recursive(3) will replace their respective value recursively.
PARAMETERS
o $array1
- The array in which elements are replaced.
o $array2
- The array from which elements will be extracted.
o $...
- Optional. More arrays from which elements will be extracted.
RETURN VALUES
Returns an array, or NULL if an error occurs.
EXAMPLES
Example #1
array_replace_recursive(3) example
<?php
$base = array('citrus' => array( "orange") , 'berries' => array("blackberry", "raspberry"), );
$replacements = array('citrus' => array('pineapple'), 'berries' => array('blueberry'));
$basket = array_replace_recursive($base, $replacements);
print_r($basket);
$basket = array_replace($base, $replacements);
print_r($basket);
?>
The above example will output:
Array
(
[citrus] => Array
(
[0] => pineapple
)
[berries] => Array
(
[0] => blueberry
[1] => raspberry
)
)
Array
(
[citrus] => Array
(
[0] => pineapple
)
[berries] => Array
(
[0] => blueberry
)
)
Example #2
array_replace_recursive(3) and recursive behavior
<?php
$base = array('citrus' => array("orange") , 'berries' => array("blackberry", "raspberry"), 'others' => 'banana' );
$replacements = array('citrus' => 'pineapple', 'berries' => array('blueberry'), 'others' => array('litchis'));
$replacements2 = array('citrus' => array('pineapple'), 'berries' => array('blueberry'), 'others' => 'litchis');
$basket = array_replace_recursive($base, $replacements, $replacements2);
print_r($basket);
?>
The above example will output:
Array
(
[citrus] => Array
(
[0] => pineapple
)
[berries] => Array
(
[0] => blueberry
[1] => raspberry
)
[others] => litchis
)
SEE ALSO
array_replace(3), array_merge_recursive(3).
PHP Documentation Group ARRAY_REPLACE_RECURSIVE(3)