• joelfromaus@aussie.zone
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    17 hours ago

    Since all of the “Linux is easy” folk are here I’ll ask a question even though I’m not near my PC:

    I’m dual booting W11 and ZorinOS, I have 3 drives and only the OS drive mounts at boot. The other 2, games SSD and a storage HDD, have to mounted manually. An online search yielded that this was “expected behaviour” and “how it’s designed to work” but unfortunately it confuses Steam each time I boot because as far as Steam is concerned the drive ceases to exist.

    Has anyone else had the same issue? I think I could use crontab to mount the drives at boot but it seems like something that shouldn’t be happening at all.

    • the_riviera_kid@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      I had to figure this out the hard way because everywhere I asked the question I’d get told how I was wrong and it’s good actually. So good luck finding anything helpful for your specific install. I will share with you some links that kinda got me there. I had to figure out most of the steps individually and piece them together from multiple sources.

      https://discussion.fedoraproject.org/t/mounting-permanently-a-storage-unit-in-fedora-kde-automount-at-boot-no-password-all-users-can-see-and-edit-files/148030/15?replies_to_post_number=16

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eoq_cgAWMmQ

      https://universal-blue.discourse.group/t/auto-mounting-secondary-drives/970

      I’m not sure sure how relevant those links will be as I was trying to do the same on bazzite and not zorin but hopefully they help. If you are able to install gnome disks (if you haven’t already) there is a checkbox to do it for you but I forget where it is. I have a little document typed up on my PC at home that I can share with you as well when I get there later on the off chance that it is helpful. If you have questions, ask away I’m not sure I will be helpful but I’ll do what I can.

      FYI, linux seems to hate NTFS partitions and that may be a contributing factor here.

    • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      You can mount your drives on boot in fstab (/etc/fstab). This is only a low-key pain in the ass, and it’s probably a good thing your internally installed drives won’t change very often.

      If whatever method you use to mount them outright requires using the full mount command, possibly with a shitload of parameters attached, you can also do it on boot as a cron job that fires on boot (crontab -e) by prefacing the command with @reboot rather than the usual set of time parameters. This is how I handle e.g. mounting complicated network shares on my servers. This will fire before you even get to your login screen, so the drives ought to be accessible by the time Steam has to do whatever it does.

    • dknelson@lemmings.world
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      16 hours ago

      Not sure what you searched for to get those answers, all I had to search was “Linux mount at boot” to get this answer with directions for editing /etc/fstab or using the gnome disk utility gui based on your preference

      • uniquethrowagay@feddit.org
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        13 hours ago

        It’s absolutely bananas that internal drives are not mounted automatically by standard. It’s even more bananas that it’s not easily customizable via GUI. Gnomes partitioning app can somewhat do it I believe, in KDE’s partitioning app, it was completely broken last time I tried. Either way I lost two people back to Windows because of this

        • 1984@lemmy.today
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          12 hours ago

          Yeah its not a perfect system, has some flaws, but its actual freedom from surveillance and late stage capitalism on the plus side.

          Not bad for a free, modern desktop that looks stunning.

          • uniquethrowagay@feddit.org
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            5 hours ago

            Absolutely! I’ve been on Linux since 2017 and KDE Plasma since 2019-ish. It outperforms Windows even in terms of usability/ease of use in most cases. My 70+ years old, tech-illiterate parents happily use it.

            But things like mounting and partitioning make me scratch my head. KDEs partitioner requires sudo rights to even start and then formats partitions in a way that you need sudo rights to access it. It’s annoying and would be very easy to fix.

            • 1984@lemmy.today
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              5 hours ago

              You can fix it yourself also, just add the command being run to the sudoers file and it will always run as root without needing your input.

              Im sure chat gpt can give you the exact command to put in.

        • Narauko@lemmy.world
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          10 hours ago

          While I do agree with you on principle, keep in mind that while NTFS is technically supported in Linux there can still be issues. Reading is fine, but write can still be suspect. Someone a lot more experienced than I can correct this if I’m wrong, but it is not recommended to share a drive actively between Windows and Linux due to NTFS quirks.

          I mount my Windows NTFS data disk as needed in CachyOS, and will build the NAS I keep putting off for active file sharing as I spend more time on the Linux partition.

          • uniquethrowagay@feddit.org
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            5 hours ago

            Yeah NTFS is not a great experience indeed. You can only do so much without it being open source. But I also experienced issues with mounting ext4 or btrfs. It’s not a dealbreaker for me, but it tends to irritate new users while it seems easy to fix.

      • joelfromaus@aussie.zone
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        15 hours ago

        Not sure, but I’ll give that a go this weekend when I have some time to play around with it. Many thanks!

      • imjustmsk@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        this was the only confusing thing I found withWheb I started using Linux, but once I got my drive mounting at boot at startup.

        I don’t have any problem with doing it anymore but why don’t beginner friendly distros have like a gui version or something easier to do that with for new users?