fstab table = filesystem table table
smh my head
rofl on the floor laughing
LED diode
lmao my ass
This sounds like you are calling someone out for not actually lmaoing their ass off.
ltaoing their ass off.
FTFY
Sweet Jesus, somebody finally did it. A truly horny Linux chat up line.
Unmounting drives on sleep sounds disastrous, what ridiculous distro is this
Maybe a webdav drive?
the transition between sleep and shutdown is a fluent one. a shutdown is just a sleep that is deep enough. when the sleep is deep enough, it might be worth decoupling from energy-hungry consumers such as spinning disks in a laptop.
Platter drives will spin down on a low-power state, but will not be logically unmounted.
I donāt mount nothin until Iāve had a coffee.
Romance isnt dead after all
Yeah, but fstab entries are mounted at boot, not wake.
Maybe you meant an auto mount entry, āI mount you as soon as I detect youā
Fucking with fstab without fully knowing what I was doing was a powerful early Linux lesson for me lol. Luckily I was using Time Shift so it was very easy to rollback.
Eventually got it working though, and now I understand how it works (though I havenāt needed to edit it since switching to bazzite)
I took a while to figure out my error at the time, but I think I managed to unfuck it using recovery mode eventually. Now I know why people generally recommend mounting scripts instead of fstab.
What does bazzite do differently?
Bazzite is atomic and immutable, so you cannot (or at the very least, itās made difficult, and its not recommended) alter anything on your OS partition. Like you literally donāt have permission to. I couldnāt edit fstab if I tried.
So you install programs with flatpak, distrobox (works very well), and on the occasion you really need to (like for VPN software or something), you can ālayerā an app onto your OS image.
Basically, every time you turn the PC on, the OS initializes to the saved image. Itās incredibly stable.
If you install something, nothing changes until you reboot. If an update breaks your OS install or anything like that (very very rare), you can just simply rollback to the previous OS image.
Itās a little bit of a learning curve to figure out how to do some things, but once you get it, itās almost boring how stable it is lol.
I used to use Time Shift, and took regular snapshots, so I could rollback whenever I fucked up fstab or something else. So if youāre not looking for something as drastic as an immutable OS, maybe look into that?
If you want more info, look up āostreeā and ārpm-ostreeā
I have a spare SSD (messing with which was the subject of my aforementioned FAFO), so Iām not opposed to trying new things. Iāve also heard about layering and ostree before, but never taken the time to understand them in depth. Maybe when Iāve next got some time off, Iāll spend a day or three toying around with it. Itās been a while since my last distro hop (currently using Nobara, so Fedora isnāt entirely new ground to me).
If I did want to mount something at boot in the manner of fstab ā putting aside the āwhyā, this is just technical curiosity ā what would be the idiomatic way to achieve that?
I just use the KDE partition manager. I havenāt had to mess with mounting anything via command line once since installing Bazzite, so Iām not sure if thereās another way to edit fstab (there usually is, itās just recommended against unless you have no other options).
Yeah, if youāre familiar with Nobara/Fedora, then you already have a leg up. Bazzite is based on, I believe, Kinoite. It is just optimized for gaming, and it includes a ton of ujust ārecipesā (pre-made scripts basically) to add/remove gaming-related functions, among other things. For example, I just type āujust updateā into the terminal and it updates everything, including firmware, flatpaks, local packages, etc.
It just works. Itās very beginner friendly, but donāt let that turn you off. Thereās a lot you can do, you just need to do it a different way than youāre used to.
Edit: I just saw you said āat boot.ā As I said, I donāt know beyond the gui partition manager⦠Iām sure there is a way, because it must be a relatively common thing that people run into.
Side note, if youāre troubleshooting, or looking for info on Bazzite and canāt find what youāre looking for, try searching for āsilverblueā instead as itās very similar.
I imagine the partition manager requires sudo permissions though? I generally keep my admin account separate from my normal working/gaming accounts, both for security and also to put another hurdle between myself and dumb decisions.
Oh yeah you still use sudo⦠Iām probably doing a really bad job at explaining this lol
You do still have admin priviliges for everything else, itās just your OS partition that is locked down.
And they say romance isnāt dead. /s
Thatās very O_DIRECT of you
SteamOS Official???
My fstab doesnāt actually get read on startup. Simply because
mount -ais never called.Just to demystify this magic file.
how about this niffty. if you see an angel, fstab it








