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Re: [gentoo-user] OT: Question re: UUID

Mark Knecht

2008-04-23

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On Wed, Apr 23, 2008 at 12:40 AM, Alan McKinnon <alan.mckinnon@(protected):
>
> On Tuesday 22 April 2008, Mick wrote:
> > On Monday 21 April 2008, Mark Knecht wrote:
> > > On Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 2:22 PM, Neil Bothwick <neil@(protected)>
> wrote:
> > > > On Mon, 21 Apr 2008 17:41:58 +0200, Dirk Heinrichs wrote:
> > > > > The other possible way would be to give your devices unique
> > > > > names, either via udev or by using LVM. Advantage over UUIDs:
> > > > > much easier to read.
> > > >
> > > > Or you could use filesystem labels.
> > >
> > > I've used filesystem labels for a long time and generally it works
> > > really well. Only problem I've had is my Dad's machine has a Maxtor
> > > 1-touch 1394 drive. It seems that often it doesn't get recognized
> > > by the 1394 subsystem fast enough to satisfy whatever requirements
> > > the Gentoo scripts have for the label being readable so it doesn't
> > > reliably get recognized every time.
> >
> > I have thought about using labels, but never really ventured into it
> > (I think I tried it once on a server). Can I do it retrospectively
> > on ext2, reiserfs and xfs, or is it going to erase the contents of
> > the partition?
>
> No, it's safe. The various file system tools have a *label* or *tune*
> tool to add a label to the fs metadata. Then simply update fstab.
>
> The fun starts in finding the tool for your filesystems. ext2/3 is
> easy - it's e2label. ReiserFS is a little more obscure :-) Finding this
> amazing Reiser tool is left as an exercise for the reader (i.e. I can
> never remember what it is myself and am too damn lazy to go and look
> right now)
>
> Personally, I prefer labels over other disk id methods. I get to choose
> the label myself and can ensure they are unique in my world (but maybe
> not in the universe like UUIDs are). If I have to mkfs a volume from
> scratch for some reason, it's easier for me to to re-use the same label
> than to re-use or copy-paste those long UUID strings
>
> --
> Alan McKinnon
> alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
>

I like labels also. I've had a couple of cases where I've taken a
drive out of an old system but kept the drive around. Later I put the
drive in a 1394 drive case.I checked the drive label and immediately
knew it was a drive with ripped music, sessions I've recorded in
Ardour, etc. Labels are human readable and I tend to make them quite
descriptive.
--
gentoo-user@(protected)

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