Sortix nightly manual
This manual documents Sortix nightly, a development build that has not been officially released. You can instead view this document in the latest official manual.
FATLABEL(8) | System Manager's Manual | FATLABEL(8) |
NAME
fatlabel - set or get MS-DOS filesystem label or volume IDSYNOPSIS
fatlabel [OPTIONS] DEVICE [NEW]DESCRIPTION
fatlabel will display or change the volume label or volume ID on the MS-DOS filesystem located on DEVICE. By default it works in label mode. It can be switched to volume ID mode with the option -i or --volume-id.OPTIONS
- -i, --volume-id
- Switch to volume ID mode.
- -r, --reset
- Remove label in label mode or generate new ID in volume ID mode.
- -c PAGE, --codepage=PAGE
- Use DOS codepage PAGE to encode/decode label. By default codepage 850 is used.
- -h, --help
- Display a help message and terminate.
- -V, --version
- Show version number and terminate.
COMPATIBILITY and BUGS
For historic reasons FAT label is stored in two different locations: in the boot sector and as a special volume label entry in the root directory. MS-DOS 5.00, MS-DOS 6.22, MS-DOS 7.10, Windows 98, Windows XP and also Windows 10 read FAT label only from the root directory. Absence of the volume label in the root directory is interpreted as empty or none label, even if boot sector contains some valid label.DOS CODEPAGES
MS-DOS and Windows systems use DOS (OEM) codepage for encoding and decoding FAT label. In Windows systems DOS codepage is global for all running applications and cannot be configured explicitly. It is set implicitly by option Language for non-Unicode programs available in Regional and Language Options via Control Panel. Default DOS codepage for fatlabel is 850. See following mapping table between DOS codepage and Language for non-Unicode programs:Codepage | Language |
437 | English (India), English (Malaysia), English (Republic of the Philippines), English (Singapore), English (South Africa), English (United States), English (Zimbabwe), Filipino, Hausa, Igbo, Inuktitut, Kinyarwanda, Kiswahili, Yoruba |
720 | Arabic, Dari, Persian, Urdu, Uyghur |
737 | Greek |
775 | Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian |
850 | Afrikaans, Alsatian, Basque, Breton, Catalan, Corsican, Danish, Dutch, English (Australia), English (Belize), English (Canada), English (Caribbean), English (Ireland), English (Jamaica), English (New Zealand), English (Trinidad and Tobago), English (United Kingdom), Faroese, Finnish, French, Frisian, Galician, German, Greenlandic, Icelandic, Indonesian, Irish, isiXhosa, isiZulu, Italian, K'iche, Lower Sorbian, Luxembourgish, Malay, Mapudungun, Mohawk, Norwegian, Occitan, Portuguese, Quechua, Romansh, Sami, Scottish Gaelic, Sesotho sa Leboa, Setswana, Spanish, Swedish, Tamazight, Upper Sorbian, Welsh, Wolof |
852 | Albanian, Bosnian (Latin), Croatian, Czech, Hungarian, Polish, Romanian, Serbian (Latin), Slovak, Slovenian, Turkmen |
855 | Bosnian (Cyrillic), Serbian (Cyrillic) |
857 | Azeri (Latin), Turkish, Uzbek (Latin) |
862 | Hebrew |
866 | Azeri (Cyrillic), Bashkir, Belarusian, Bulgarian, Kyrgyz, Macedonian, Mongolian, Russian, Tajik, Tatar, Ukrainian, Uzbek (Cyrillic), Yakut |
874 | Thai |
932 | Japanese |
936 | Chinese (Simplified) |
949 | Korean |
950 | Chinese (Traditional) |
1258 | Vietnamese |
SEE ALSO
fsck.fat(8), mkfs.fat(8)HOMEPAGE
The home for the dosfstools project is its GitHub project pageAUTHORS
dosfstools were written by Werner Almesberger Roman Hodek and others. Current maintainers are Andreas Bombe and Pali Rohár2021-01-31 | dosfstools 4.2 |