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Operating Systems Linux Inode number changes for a file in Redhat Linux Post 302920370 by cero on Thursday 9th of October 2014 04:27:19 AM
Old 10-09-2014
This is just a wild guess - I can not reproduce your findings on my systems and I have no gedit available.
vi usually creates a swap file which you work on instead of the original file. Maybe your vi-implementation replaces the original file with the swap file. vim 7.3 offers the -n flag to disallow the creation of the swap file (:set uc=0 should do the same).
 

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SWAPLABEL(8)						     Linux Programmer's Manual						      SWAPLABEL(8)

NAME
swaplabel - Print or change the label / UUID of a swap area SYNOPSIS
swaplabel [-L label] [-U UUID] device DESCRIPTION
swaplabel will display or change the label / UUID of a swap partition located on device (or regular file). If the optional arguments -L and -U are not present, swaplabel will simply display the swap area label and UUID of device. If an optional argument is present, then swaplabel will change the appropriate value of device. These values can also be set during swap creation using mkswap(8). The swaplabel utility allows to change the label or UUID on actively used swap device. OPTIONS
-h, --help Print help and exit. -L, --label label Specify a new label for device. Swap partition labels can be at most 16 characters long. If label is longer than 16 characters, swapinfo will truncate it and print a warning message. -U, --uuid uuid Specify a new UUID for device. UUID must be in the standard 8-4-4-4-12 character format, such as is output by uuidgen(1). AUTHOR
swaplabel was written by Jason Borden <jborden@bluehost.com> and Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>. AVAILABILITY
swaplabel is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/. SEE ALSO
mkswap(8), swapon(8), uuidgen(1) Linux 2 April 2010 SWAPLABEL(8)
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