Jesse Keating wrote:
On Sat, 2008-03-15 at 11:21 -0400, G.Wolfe Woodbury wrote:
But it's not "user friendly" in that it has no meaning that the user can
associate to the contents.
Thinking that "/dev/sda1" or "LABEL=/root" has any real meaning is just
false anyway. It sometimes works, just by happy accident. But if
you're mixing machines or cloning things it'll go wrong.
It used to be that /dev/hda1 and /dev/sda1 had defined meanings. IMV
moving away from that was a mistake.
I recall some discussion years ago regarding larger SCSI devices, about
problems recognising drives.
The use of UUIDs might help there, but I don't see any merit in
inflicting that solution on the 90%+ users who don't have it. Enterprise
people might have the technical background to adjust to it, but almost
nobody on (eg) fedora-list does.
We who generally can attach four disks (USB, firewire aside) don't have
a problem knowing which drive is which: it's it is _the_ drive, or we
plugged in another and know which is which, or we can pop the top off
and have a look.
--
Cheers
John
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