this post was submitted on 15 Feb 2024
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I installed Fedora 39 on an old iMac I had with a fusion drive (128GB SSD +1TB spinning disk.)

Fedora is installed on the SSD, and I want to use the spinning disk as a media drive. Problem is, it does not mount by default, so I figure I need to edit /etc/fstab to have it mount at startup.

I’m at work so I SSH into the iMac and get the UUID for the disk and then open fstab in vi, enter the new line with the uuid, directory I want the drive mounted in (/media), the filesystem (ext4) and the options. Try to write and quit, get an error the file is readonly. Try to set the file to noreadonly, write fails again. Try :wq! and get the error the file cannot be opened to write.

Exit vi, ls -la and see the file is read-only.

sudo chmod 644 fstab, put in password. ls -la shows file is still read only. lsattr fstab, immutable flag is not set.

Is this happening because I’m on SSH, or is there some other issue?

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[–] Pantherina@feddit.de 2 points 9 months ago (5 children)

Before setting something up from scratch, why not use btrfs (fedora default) or bcachefs (which is optimized for such loads I think)?

[–] dylanmorgan@slrpnk.net 3 points 9 months ago (4 children)

It was my understanding that btrfs is still new-ish and has some kinks to work out. Ext4 is pretty well understood at this point.

[–] ashaman2007@lemm.ee 2 points 9 months ago

I use BTRFS and even have convenient Snapper snapshotting set up. It works great. Here is a whole step by step guide on how to set up your system with it: https://sysguides.com/install-fedora-with-snapshot-and-rollback-support

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