On Thu, Nov 29, 2007 at 02:27:22PM -0700, Donald D Henson wrote:
Greg KH wrote:
On Thu, Nov 29, 2007 at 06:09:51AM -0700, Donald D Henson wrote:
I have four partitions on three external disk drives. They show up in my Gnome Places Panel as <capacity> Volume. For example:
129 GB Volume
I would like to have them show up with a more meaningful name, such as:
Public
This seems like a problem with a simple solution but the articles I've found so far go into theoretical kernel jargon, about 99% of which I don't understand. Can anyone point me to an easily understandable procedure for naming a volume? I'd appreciate any assistance.
You can set the volume id when you create the volume initially with the mke2fs program using the -L option (this is for ext2/3 filesystems, other file systems also have their options.)
If the filesystem is already created, and you don't want to destroy it and all of the data on it, just use the tune2fs program, again with the -L option.
Hope this helps,
greg k-h
It seemed to be just what I needed but I can't get it to change the volume name. As root, I used the command:
tune2fs -L Float /dev/sdc1
It appeared to work but when I looked at it's properties, the Volume name hadn't changed. Do you see anything wrong with the command?
How did you look at the properties of the device? Did you reboot? Try running the volume-id program to view it. thanks, greg k-h -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org