Hello, last night on a whim, I pulled the cord and finally am making a push to use Linux exclusively. I am not the most knowledgeable when it comes to Linux but I can hold my own enough.
EXCEPT when it comes to mounting drives and making them work with programs. I’ve gotten them wiped and mounted, but steam does not see them as internal drives and at each reboot, they or any games I put on there are gone from steam. They also do not show up with their names I’ve given them during formatting.
Would adding them to fstab fix some of these issues? I know they would at least be mounted before I ever open steam. So maybe there is a chance?
For more info, these are two Samsung 800 series SSD drives. One 250 GB, and the other 500 GB. These are games only SSDs as it’s their only job.
I am on elementary OS version 7.
Any help will be very much appreciated. Thanks for anyone who takes the time to respond.
If you’re on a system that has GNOME-based
gio
, the commandgio mount $(realpath /dev/disk/by-uuid/UUIDHERE)
is a way of mounting drives as a user.
This is basically what the file manager(s) like Nemo / Thunar / Nautilus do under the hood when mounting drives because they use the
gio
subsystem.The trick would be to ensure whatever launches Steam ensures the right
gio
commands are despatched before the main Steam executable.The reason I’m suggesting
gio
is that if you’re used to mounting drives using the file manager, it will put those drives in the same filesystem places that the file manager does, and it means that those drives aren’t mounted until you need them if that’s preferable.e.g. on my system, drives are mounted at /media/USERNAME/DRIVELABEL.
Of course, as others point out, all of this can also be done old-school with
fstab
.