Hello: I have four partitions on a USB drive, including ntfs, fat32, and ext4. None of them is accessible as automounted. Each of them is accessible as root, however, and each of them is accessible when mounted manually with this command:
$ sudo mount /dev/sdXN /mnt/<mountpoint> I realize this is a permissions issue. In fact the error message when clicking on one of these partitions that shows up in files or dolphin tells me it is. I have tried a few things and wasted some hours this morning googling this problem, encountering a virtual Pacific Garbage Patch of miscellaneous traffic, not one of them seeming specific to this probably very simple problem. (It's a sign of the times, I guess). I can mount even a partition that already shows up as mounted on files or dolphin and is unreadable, except for ntfs, which does not allow itself to be mounted until unmounted first. At this point, the newly mounted partitions can be accessed normally. I have tried a recipe for udev from an archilinux article, but this was no better. I wrote entries into /etc/fstab for each partition, using Label=<label>. This does not work. This seems strange because I have used this in the past. As long as these fstab entries were in the file, the system would not boot normally. There may be a few different things going on here? I would very much appreciate a pointer. I can manually mount, for now, but since I access files on these partitions regularly, it would be extremely helpful for them to be automatically mounted. Alan Davis PS. It's good to be using Debian GNU/Linux again after many years. The sticking point (that led to my giving up) has almost always been networking, usually a wifi adaptor that is not supported. This time it took two days for me to copy over *deb files one at a time, but eventually, the install succeeded, in good fashion.