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A simpler way to mount drives - 100%
Your suggestion to use fstab will only work 100% of the time for single disk setups. If you have multiple disks, especially across multiple busses, then the disk numbering order won't necessarily be the same after every reboot.
A simpler way to mount drives - 100%
Each volume/partition has a unique, unchanging UUID.
A simpler way to mount drives - 100%
UUID fstab mounting also works fine with FireWire drives, you've just got to set the automount preferences right, via
It won't work for moving the swapfile, because moving the swapfile comes too soon in the boot process. I'd read this widely, and in fact I stated it as a truism on my web page, but after first reading this post I did a double take, "Maybe this behavior changed and I didn't test it recently!?" No, still doesn't work for moving the swap.
Using the UUID to reference volumes
I must cede to your greater knowledge of the nuances of the boot process. My intention was primarily to bring attention to an intrinsic property (that everyone in the thread seemed to be ignoring) of any volume/partition that is:
Please let me know if there is some reason why the UUID can't be used to identfy a drive (whether used as a swap volume or some other purpose),
Using the UUID to reference volumes
This thread is about setting up a swap partition. |
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