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Title: Steam Issue
PublicNuisance 20 Dec 2014
Has anybody else had an issue with Steam where it won't see library folders on separate hard drives you have created ? They're there, I can run games that I have installed to them but Steam doesn't always see them when I'm trying to install new games. It only happens with the Linux version of Steam, never Windows. Any suggestions ?

Ok, this no longer a Steam issue. The reason Steam doesn't always see it is for some reason the drive seems to lose permissions. I have to back and set it to allow read and writes to my account. Worse it it doesn't always seem to save even that.
StianTheDark 20 Dec 2014
Every time I fire up my system I have to go onto my external drive with Dolphin and then assign it a Steam Library thing again.

What I would suggest you did, is opening up whatever program you use to browse files as root (sudo) and then assign permissions again. If that still doesn't work, go into command line and use chmod -r <permissionsettings> <dirname>.
psychoamericana 21 Dec 2014
I was able to circumvent this problem by adding the volume to fstab and mount it upon initial login. After that I used chmod to set permissions and I was all set, no more issues.
PublicNuisance 21 Dec 2014
I found a solution. If I open the hard drive before opening Steam it sees it fine. I don't have to access anything just opening it works. I guess Linux doesn't mount it until I open the drive. Kind of strange but not exactly a lot of work to fix.
wolfyrion 22 Dec 2014
Quoting: PublicNuisanceI found a solution. If I open the hard drive before opening Steam it sees it fine. I don't have to access anything just opening it works. I guess Linux doesn't mount it until I open the drive. Kind of strange but not exactly a lot of work to fix.
just use fstab to mount your hard drives for example
first get root access on terminal

gedit /etc/fstab

/dev/sdc1 /media/GAMES ext4 defaults,noatime,nodiratime 0 1
/dev/sdd1 /media/ROMS ext4 defaults,noatime,nodiratime 0 1
Xpander 22 Dec 2014
i would suggest to use uuid instead of /dev/sdx
cause if you swap your cables around then it might get wrong places

so
UUID=5bcd0e0b-b123-4abc-b123-bc6ff14d98f2 /media/GAMES ext4 defaults,noatime,nodiratime 0 1

etc

to find out your disk uuid use gparted or /dev/disk/by-uuid
WorMzy 24 Dec 2014
Or lsblk --output NAME,MOUNTPOINT,UUID

Incidentally, only your root partition should have a pass_no of 1, everything else should have a 0 or 2. I don't think it really matters nowadays, but there you go.
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