Hello,

Apparently, it is also possible to either:
-  give a name to the filesystem (use e2label to do so, the filesystem being 
ext4) and mount the filesystem by using this name as a parameter of the mount 
command instead of /dev/sd* or an UUID
-  give a name to the underlyning partition (use parted or similar tool  to do 
so) and mount the filesystem by using this name as a parameter of the mount 
command instead of /dev/sd* or an UUID. On a PC it is only possible with a GPT 
disk, not an MBR/DOS one, and that probably implies there is no other 
filesystem on that specific partition.

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