PDA

View Full Version : Naming USB meory stick



a2z
November 2nd, 2009, 10:39 AM
Hi everyone,
I've come to this forum not knowing any better where else to put this question.
I've read some replies as to naming usb sticks/thumb drives.
Some say you can't name them. And in my little experience with linux (since jan.09) have not been able to find a way to do it.

If this is the case with linux, I would just about expect a remedy for this. Mostly because I can name sticks in windows and the naming is preserved when passed over to ubuntu.
And I also know what ever you can do in windows, you can do with linux and probably better.

Anyone know how to name usb drives.
I'm using ubuntu jaunty. I have tried karmic beta about 3 weeks prior to final release. Liked it for the most part, but for me, continually went south.
Thanks for any and all input,
a2z

squaregoldfish
November 2nd, 2009, 11:08 AM
I'm pretty sure you can do this with GPartEd - the disk partitioning tool. Just be careful with it!

Steve.

a2z
November 2nd, 2009, 07:00 PM
I'm pretty sure you can do this with GPartEd - the disk partitioning tool. Just be careful with it!

Steve.

This is good news.

Thanks, I hope it works

a2z

itnet7
November 3rd, 2009, 02:47 AM
You can also do this while formatting the partition using fdisk.

$ sudo mkfs.vfat -F 16 -n liveusb /dev/sdb1

The label would be livusb in the above example.

Or if you already have a partition you can follow this guide (https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RenameUSBDrive#Changing%20the%20Label) for both gparted and CLI.


I did the following on my usb-thumbdrive


sudo mlabel -i /dev/sdb1 -s ::

And received the following:

Total number of sectors (1973410) not a multiple of sectors per track (61)!
Add mtools_skip_check=1 to your .mtoolsrc file to skip this test

Then I added this:


echo mtools_skip_check=1 >> ~/.mtoolsrc

and re-ran the previous command:


sudo mlabel -i /dev/sdb1 -s ::

This time it showed me this:


Volume has no label

I edited the following:


sudo nano /etc/mtools.conf

and added this line to the end of the .conf file.


drive p: file="/dev/sdb1"

and saved my changes.


sudo mlabel p:usb-ubuntu

then ran the following again:


sudo mlabel -i /dev/sdb1 -s ::

and saw this:


Volume label is USB-UBUNTU

I just did this on Karmic without any troubles.

Hope this helps!

Chris Crisafulli
itnet7/irc.freenode.net
Ubuntu Florida Team