Adding a new HDD always breaks my Ubuntu Server 16.10 [closed]











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I have a custom desktop tower running Ubuntu server 16.10 with multiple HDDs installed.



They are all confinigured and mounted using fstab.



My fstab file looks like this:



/dev/sdb1   /media/seagate1bHdd   ext4  defaults    0       2
/dev/sdc1 /media/wd3TbHdd ext4 defaults 0 2
/dev/sdd /media/wd3TbHddNtfs ntfs defaults 0 2


When I add a new HDD, the location of my HDDs ie /dev/xxx changes again.



How can I prevent this from happening everytime I install a new HDD to my server?



It's a pain to having to edit the fstab again!










share|improve this question















closed as off-topic by Thomas, pomsky, chili555, N0rbert, karel Nov 25 at 14:55


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is specific to an end of life Ubuntu release. These are no longer supported and are therefore off-topic here. To upgrade, see: How to install software or upgrade from old unsupported release?" – pomsky, chili555, N0rbert, karel

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • Possible duplicate of 17.10: How to auto mount drives on startup?
    – Thomas
    Nov 25 at 13:56










  • ahh so if use the uuid to setup my fstab that would do the trick? Does the UUID stay the same?
    – jonney
    Nov 25 at 14:12






  • 1




    The UUID stays the same. It only changes if you reformat the drive.
    – Thomas
    Nov 25 at 14:16










  • thanks it worked!
    – jonney
    Nov 25 at 15:52















up vote
-1
down vote

favorite












I have a custom desktop tower running Ubuntu server 16.10 with multiple HDDs installed.



They are all confinigured and mounted using fstab.



My fstab file looks like this:



/dev/sdb1   /media/seagate1bHdd   ext4  defaults    0       2
/dev/sdc1 /media/wd3TbHdd ext4 defaults 0 2
/dev/sdd /media/wd3TbHddNtfs ntfs defaults 0 2


When I add a new HDD, the location of my HDDs ie /dev/xxx changes again.



How can I prevent this from happening everytime I install a new HDD to my server?



It's a pain to having to edit the fstab again!










share|improve this question















closed as off-topic by Thomas, pomsky, chili555, N0rbert, karel Nov 25 at 14:55


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is specific to an end of life Ubuntu release. These are no longer supported and are therefore off-topic here. To upgrade, see: How to install software or upgrade from old unsupported release?" – pomsky, chili555, N0rbert, karel

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • Possible duplicate of 17.10: How to auto mount drives on startup?
    – Thomas
    Nov 25 at 13:56










  • ahh so if use the uuid to setup my fstab that would do the trick? Does the UUID stay the same?
    – jonney
    Nov 25 at 14:12






  • 1




    The UUID stays the same. It only changes if you reformat the drive.
    – Thomas
    Nov 25 at 14:16










  • thanks it worked!
    – jonney
    Nov 25 at 15:52













up vote
-1
down vote

favorite









up vote
-1
down vote

favorite











I have a custom desktop tower running Ubuntu server 16.10 with multiple HDDs installed.



They are all confinigured and mounted using fstab.



My fstab file looks like this:



/dev/sdb1   /media/seagate1bHdd   ext4  defaults    0       2
/dev/sdc1 /media/wd3TbHdd ext4 defaults 0 2
/dev/sdd /media/wd3TbHddNtfs ntfs defaults 0 2


When I add a new HDD, the location of my HDDs ie /dev/xxx changes again.



How can I prevent this from happening everytime I install a new HDD to my server?



It's a pain to having to edit the fstab again!










share|improve this question















I have a custom desktop tower running Ubuntu server 16.10 with multiple HDDs installed.



They are all confinigured and mounted using fstab.



My fstab file looks like this:



/dev/sdb1   /media/seagate1bHdd   ext4  defaults    0       2
/dev/sdc1 /media/wd3TbHdd ext4 defaults 0 2
/dev/sdd /media/wd3TbHddNtfs ntfs defaults 0 2


When I add a new HDD, the location of my HDDs ie /dev/xxx changes again.



How can I prevent this from happening everytime I install a new HDD to my server?



It's a pain to having to edit the fstab again!







server partitioning mount hard-drive fstab






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 25 at 14:57









SurvivalMachine

1,1703717




1,1703717










asked Nov 25 at 13:51









jonney

158337




158337




closed as off-topic by Thomas, pomsky, chili555, N0rbert, karel Nov 25 at 14:55


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is specific to an end of life Ubuntu release. These are no longer supported and are therefore off-topic here. To upgrade, see: How to install software or upgrade from old unsupported release?" – pomsky, chili555, N0rbert, karel

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by Thomas, pomsky, chili555, N0rbert, karel Nov 25 at 14:55


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is specific to an end of life Ubuntu release. These are no longer supported and are therefore off-topic here. To upgrade, see: How to install software or upgrade from old unsupported release?" – pomsky, chili555, N0rbert, karel

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.












  • Possible duplicate of 17.10: How to auto mount drives on startup?
    – Thomas
    Nov 25 at 13:56










  • ahh so if use the uuid to setup my fstab that would do the trick? Does the UUID stay the same?
    – jonney
    Nov 25 at 14:12






  • 1




    The UUID stays the same. It only changes if you reformat the drive.
    – Thomas
    Nov 25 at 14:16










  • thanks it worked!
    – jonney
    Nov 25 at 15:52


















  • Possible duplicate of 17.10: How to auto mount drives on startup?
    – Thomas
    Nov 25 at 13:56










  • ahh so if use the uuid to setup my fstab that would do the trick? Does the UUID stay the same?
    – jonney
    Nov 25 at 14:12






  • 1




    The UUID stays the same. It only changes if you reformat the drive.
    – Thomas
    Nov 25 at 14:16










  • thanks it worked!
    – jonney
    Nov 25 at 15:52
















Possible duplicate of 17.10: How to auto mount drives on startup?
– Thomas
Nov 25 at 13:56




Possible duplicate of 17.10: How to auto mount drives on startup?
– Thomas
Nov 25 at 13:56












ahh so if use the uuid to setup my fstab that would do the trick? Does the UUID stay the same?
– jonney
Nov 25 at 14:12




ahh so if use the uuid to setup my fstab that would do the trick? Does the UUID stay the same?
– jonney
Nov 25 at 14:12




1




1




The UUID stays the same. It only changes if you reformat the drive.
– Thomas
Nov 25 at 14:16




The UUID stays the same. It only changes if you reformat the drive.
– Thomas
Nov 25 at 14:16












thanks it worked!
– jonney
Nov 25 at 15:52




thanks it worked!
– jonney
Nov 25 at 15:52















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