On Tue, 2007-07-24 at 17:56 -0600, Karl Larsen wrote: > I did a google search and discovered that e2label can make just fine > labels for my files. They were hhhhhedffggeertytuu and I changed them to > fedora_7. Then I rebooted and fedora_7 would not come up and had a > kernel panic and all that shit! Hmm, some little while ago I replied to one of your posts detailing how you could have done all of that, quite easily. Yours has been the only one that I've seen generate labels like that (gibberish characters). All the ones I've seen come with labels something like the mount points (e.g. /home as the label, and swap-hda7 as a swap label). How did you initially partition your drive? Did you let the installer do it for you? Did you do it by hand? With what program? > I had to use my fedora 7 DVD and select Rescue. When it got to the > point I asked it to mount my fedora 7 system and it FAILED! I had to use > mount the darn thing myself and then use joe to remove the dam labels I > made and replaced them with /dev/sdb5 which thank God now work! Now it > will boot again. Whether the labels are there or not doesn't matter, as far as booting is concerned. (The labels are written to the partitions.) But what you put in your grub.conf and /etc/fstab can matter for your issue. Changing the fstab entries back to device names isn't really "removing the labels," and it isn't necessary to remove them. > Please no one mention labels AGAIN! I was tempted to reply in HTML, just so I could write "LABELS!" in 54 point text... -- [tim@bigblack ~]$ uname -ipr 2.6.22.1-27.fc7 i686 i386 Using FC 4, 5, 6 & 7, plus CentOS 5. Today, it's FC7. Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists.