How to edit label of USB drive?

From Terminal

You have to use the mlabel command.

  • First type the mount command to find out the device location of you pen drive. Find the line which goes like “/dev/sdc1 on /media/disk …”.

  • This means the device sdc1 which is my pen drive is mounted on /media/disk.

  • Next unmount the device.

    sudo umount /media/disk

  • Next use this command.

    sudo mlabel -i /dev/sdc1 ::<new_label>

If you get a message like:

Total number of sectors (7831520) not a multiple of sectors per track (63)! You can easily ignore the check by running this command:

echo mtools_skip_check=1 >> ~/.mtoolsrc

Try again and it should work.

  • The name of the USB should have changed. Unplug and Plug the pen drive back in and it will be mounted with the new label name.

The GUI way

  • For this you need the Gparted software. Install it if you don’t have it already.

  • Open the software as a super user, and select the pen drive from GParted>Devices>

  • Unmount the device if it hasn’t been, by right clicking on it.

  • After unmounting, right click on it and select “Label” and change it to whatever you want it to be. And then Apply it, by clicking the Edit>Apply All Operations.

  • Your pendrives label should be changed now.

Original Source


You got several options (some require installation). Out of these e2label should be the easiest.

Gparted

Gparted can do this. Rightclick the device and choose label. Needs installation of gparted though.


There are several command line methods:

tune2fs - Adjust tunable filesystem parameters on ext2/ext3/ext4 filesystems

Example: sudo tune2fs -L {label} {devicename}


e2label - Change the label on an ext2/ext3/ext4 filesystem

Example: sudo e2label {device} {label}


There is also the Windows method:

mlabel - make an MSDOS volume label

Add a line in the /etc/mtools.conf file like this drive {letter}: file="{device}". Example: drive p: file="/dev/sdb1". Note that the drive letter can be replaced by any letter that is not present in the mtools.conf file.

Example to set the label: sudo mlabel {letter}:{label}


As well as the other answers, the more ubiquitous tool dosfslabel is well suited to this task;

dosfslabel /dev/sdd1 "My Label"

where /dev/sdd1 is the partition you wish to label.

Tags:

Usb

Usb Drive