Under OS X, the mount
command has the -t
option. The volume label is also shown in the output as part of the mount point. For example on my Mac, the command mount
produces the following output.
/dev/disk0s5 on / (hfs, local, journaled)
devfs on /dev (devfs, local, nobrowse)
map -hosts on /net (autofs, nosuid, automounted, nobrowse)
map auto_home on /home (autofs, automounted, nobrowse)
/dev/disk0s2 on /Volumes/Shark (ntfs, local, read-only, noowners)
/dev/disk0s3 on /Volumes/Shark2 (ntfs, local, read-only, noowners)
/dev/disk0s4 on /Volumes/FREEDOS2011 (msdos, asynchronous, local, noowners)
/dev/disk0s7 on /Volumes/Steelhead2 (hfs, local, journaled)
/dev/disk1s1 on /Volumes/USB4GB (msdos, local, nodev, nosuid, noowners)
To get just the ntfs
file systems, I would use the command mount -t ntfs
. The output is shown below.
/dev/disk0s2 on /Volumes/Shark (ntfs, local, read-only, noowners)
/dev/disk0s3 on /Volumes/Shark2 (ntfs, local, read-only, noowners)
In both cases, the volume labels are displayed.
Identifier Label
---------- -----------
disk0s2 Shark
disk0s3 Shark2
disk0s4 FREEDOS2011
disk0s7 Steelhead2
disk1s1 USB4GB
What is missing is the label for disk0s5
which happens to be Steelhead
.
An alternative way to display labels is to use the command diskutil list
. For my Mac, this output is shown below.
/dev/disk0
#: TYPE NAME SIZE IDENTIFIER
0: GUID_partition_scheme *1.0 TB disk0
1: EFI EFI 209.7 MB disk0s1
2: Microsoft Basic Data Shark 202.0 GB disk0s2
3: Microsoft Basic Data Shark2 202.0 GB disk0s3
4: Microsoft Basic Data FREEDOS2011 50.0 GB disk0s4
5: Apple_HFS Steelhead 245.1 GB disk0s5
6: Apple_Boot Recovery HD 650.0 MB disk0s6
7: Apple_HFS Steelhead2 198.9 GB disk0s7
8: Apple_Boot Recovery HD 650.0 MB disk0s8
9: EFI REFIND 134.2 MB disk0s9
/dev/disk1
#: TYPE NAME SIZE IDENTIFIER
0: FDisk_partition_scheme *4.0 GB disk1
1: DOS_FAT_32 USB4GB 4.0 GB disk1s1