> On 13 Jun 2017, at 11:33 am, Severin Crisp <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I regularly “talk” between my MacBook air downstairs and my iMac upstairs 
> both running the latest Sierra.  
> When I connect from the MacAir to the iMac, via Go to Server etc a list of 
> the iMac bits comes up correctly including connected external firewire HDs.  
> Among these is a 1.5T drive which runs a daily clone of my complete 1.5T 
> fusion drive, not surprisingly it is called “iMac Clone A”.  

> Recently an extra disk has appeared on the Mac Air listing titled “iMac Clone 
> A 1”.   It does not appear in Disk Utility on the iMac nor does it go away 
> with shutdowns and restarts of both Macs.   I suspect there is a preference 
> or the like that should be deleted - I assume it may need to be done on the 
> iMac as well, not just the MacAir.  
> Thanks
> Severin Crisp 

Hi Severin,

Do you always eject the iMac correctly after each ‘Connect to Server’ session?

An explanation why this can happen:

When you mount a local hard drive in OS X it will appear in the Computer Name 
section of the Finder, but may also be found on the Desktop or in the Finder 
sidebar (unless you have disabled those options). Sometimes, however, when you 
attach a local hard drive, you will see that the name of the drive has a "-1" 
or another number appended to it. 
For instance, if you have a USB flash drive labeled "USB Drive," it may appear 
as "USB Drive- 1" on your system.

In OS X, drives are accessed through the Finder's various locations, but on the 
filesystem they are given a mount point. 
The drive is first recognized and assigned a unique device ID (such as 
"disk1"--you can see these and other hardware device files by opening the 
Terminal and entering the command "ls /dev") and then is handled by the disk 
arbitration daemon, which identifies it and an available filesystem on it, and 
proceeds with mounting it if the system can recognize it.

The mount point for local drives is in the /Volumes folder, which is a hidden 
directory on the main boot drive. In this directory a folder is created and 
given the drive's name, and is used as the access point for all files on that 
local filesystem. 

If by chance you mount two drives of the same name, because the system can't 
create two mount points with the same
name it appends sequential numbers to new mount points as they are created, and 
therefore you will see the numbered drive names in the Finder.

While the numbered names for disks should only happen if there are multiple 
drives attached with the same name, it can happen for other reasons as well.

Improper unmount

When you eject a drive, the system should remove the mount point for the drive; 
however, sometimes this doesn't happen. Crashes or other improper ejecting of 
drives can sometimes cause the system to leave the drive's mount point in the 
hidden /Volumes directory, and then when you attach the drive again the system 
recognizes an existing mount point of the same name and will append a number to 
the new mount point.

To clear this problem, unmount all drives and go to the hidden /Volumes 
directory by entering the text "/Volumes" in the Finder's Go to Folder option 
(available in the Go menu). This should open the mount points directory, and if 
you see any folders, aliases, or other files in the directory that have the 
same name as your external drive, then remove them.

Use of multiple drives of the same name without rebooting

If you have multiple hard drives of the same name then the system will append a 
number to the end of each if they are mounted at the same time. If you then 
unmount the main drive, all other drives will keep their new numbered names, 
and will continue to do so regardless of whether they are ejected and 
remounted, until the system is rebooted. This is because the system associates 
the mount point name with the drive device (for example, "disk1"), which is 
then kept associated with a particular device for the remainder of the boot 
session.

To fix this problem, just reboot the computer and the drive's name should 
revert back to having no number.

Cheers,
Ronni

13-inch MacBook Air (April 2014)
1.7GHz Dual-Core Intel Core i7, Turbo Boost to 3.3GHz
8GB 1600MHz LPDDR3 SDRAM
512GB PCIe-based Flash Storage

macOS Sierra 10.12.5


> ____________________________________________________
> 
>              Assoc Prof R Severin Crisp, FAIP, FIP, CPhys
> 15 Thomas St, Mount Clarence, Albany, 6330, Western Australia
>                   ph (08) 9842 1950 ( Int'l +61 8 9842 1950)
>                            mail to: [email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>
> ____________________________________________________
> 




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