On 04/03/2015, Paul E Condon <pecon...@mesanetworks.net> wrote: > On 20150228_1557-0500, Ric Moore wrote: >> On 02/28/2015 03:42 PM, Brian wrote: >> >On Sat 28 Feb 2015 at 15:14:19 -0500, Ric Moore wrote: >> > >> >>On 02/28/2015 03:06 PM, Brian wrote: >> >>> >> >>>Relenting, somewhat. I cannot stand the pain which comes from watching >> >>>someone struggle. :) >> >>> >> >>>e2label(8). >> >> >> >>I often trust the opinion of our" hive-mind" more than I do a man >> >>page. I hate to blow up something working. :) Ric >> > >> >Very understandable. I do not think adding LABEL to your system would >> >particularly give you anything which do not have already. >> > >> >I use it with USB sticks which move from machine to machine, The UUID >> >may change but the LABEL doesn't. Debian always boots. >> > >> >Having said that, I do not think labelling with e2label would cause >> >your system to go into "blow up" mode and the UUID is is still there. >> >Changing means trusting my judgement. Ignoring the advice means you >> >can sleep well at nights. >> >> There is that to consider as well. Next time I install fresh might be a >> better time to play with labels! :) Ric > > I can't recall for sure, but I think OP is concerned about LABELing the > swap partition. A swap partition is NOT an extN formatted region of > the block-special device. e2label fails to find a superblock on a swap > partition on my jessie machine and I'm not a bit surprised at learning > that ;-O > > Also blkid displays a "PARTUUID" in addition to the familiar UUID for > all the partitions on the internal hard drive on my jessie machine. > This "PARTUUID" has fewer hex digits than a the 'real' UUID. It looks > as if there is a lot of new conventional to be learn by people who > have learned on Linux internals long ago. Or maybe I'm the last to > learn about this innovation. > > Cheers, > > -- > Paul E Condon > pecon...@mesanetworks.net >
No, it was not about labelling the swap partition. The original posting, was, I believe, seeking stepwise instructions for recovery of the GRUB multi-OS selection bootloader, using the Debian LiveCD. The context from which the references to the labelling arose, related to the partitions showing UUID's, rather than device names, and, not showing the partition labels that had been set, thence, not indicating into which partitions, the operating systems had been installed, or, which had been, prior to the installation of the trojan horse operating system, the partition that had the GRUB configuration installed, for the reinstallation of the GRUB multi-OS selection bootloader. In trying to restore GRUB, a question was asked, that was something like "Into which of the following partitions, do you want the root system installed", and, the list there, was /dev/sda<x>, with no partition labels. Neither that screen, nor the one that showed the partitions, identified using the UUID's (which, to a user like me, in the context of trying to restore the GRUB multi-OS selection bootloader, are meaningless, and, as useful as listing the subatomic particles, or the elements of the Periodic Table), showed the labels that had been set for the partitions, and so, did not show into which partition, each of the operating systems had been installed. So, the problem remains unresolved, and the issues involved, have been buried by the other material that has been posted in the thread, and it is all now confused. And, as it has all become so complicated and difficult, with the difficulties of life with which I have to deal, it all (trying to fix the particular computer system, to get it operational again) has to wait, until I can find time to deal with it further. -- Bret Busby Armadale West Australia .............. "So once you do know what the question actually is, you'll know what the answer means." - Deep Thought, Chapter 28 of Book 1 of "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: A Trilogy In Four Parts", written by Douglas Adams, published by Pan Books, 1992 .................................................... -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/CACX6j8PxoH2xVoGbyt=cwoxbwq8yrbww744thkqa8dyjer-...@mail.gmail.com