Bonjour tout le monde,
I have finally fully installed linux mint and have been working on getting everything up and running. So far, I haven’t had many issues, but I am having trouble with my 2nd drive. I just want my 2nd drive to mount on boot, and for programs to be able to write to it.
I have looked up guides on pulling up the disks in mint and going into the mount options and selecting mount on boot. This works, but for some reason, programs lose permission to write to it. When I switch the drive back to ‘user session defaults’ programs can write to it, but it doesn’t mount on boot. I haven’t found anyone mentioning this problem so I thought I would post here. Also, my home folder isn’t encrypted and when I go to permissions on the drive, it says ‘permissions could not be determined’
Thanks
You have to add the drive to a file called ‘fstab’ to have it be mounted on launch
If you want a video guide here’s the one I learnt to do it from.
It is kinda annoying Linux doesn’t seem to have a decent auto mount solution yet especially for people like me with 6+ drives in their machine.
I followed this video and the auto mount works, but my programs still can’t write to it due to lacking permissions…
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I have done the chown user command and that did fix the problem. My programs are able to write to it now. Thanks for the help
How is it formated? It isn’t NTFS or FAT is it?
No, I formatted it to ext4
Instead of using the gui for this, have you tried. creating a mount point and adding an entry to
/etc/fstab
?Edit: fixed stupid autocorrect
No, I did see some tutorials on using that, but they said that any mistake could result in crashes and having an ubootable pc… so I didn’t want to risk it.
Backup the file and have a live USB ready just in case.
Already had to use it and timeshift back lol.
You do need to be careful, but you can check for errors after editing
/etc/fstab
by running the commandsudo mount -a
. With the drive attached but not mounted. (Also good practice to use the UUID of the drive in the fstab entry)That command runs through
etc/fstab
and attempts to mount everything it is instructed to mount if it is not already mounted. And if there is an error it will let you know.If you run
sudo mount -a
and you get no output in the terminal, then there are no errors, your drive should now be mounted, and you should be fine for reboots and it should mount on startup as expected.I followed the video tutorial that was in another comment and it worked but my programs still can’t write to it due to lacking permissions
NTFS?
No, ext4
You can always boot a live environment and edit the file from there if anything goes wrong.
You can always check its consistency if you run a
mount -a
after editing fstab. But yeah, an error in the file can cause some annoyance-
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