Second drive disappearing from Steam after every reboot

Hi! I decided to switch from Windows yesterday, but today already I got a problem. Every time I restart my computer, my second 2tb drive disappears from Steam, and I need to add it again every time. Would anyone be able to help me? Thanks in advance!
Solution:
Okay, I didnt really understood at first, but used this video to get it, since its easier understanding visually.
TechHut
YouTube
How to Auto Mount Drives in Linux on Boot
Reviewing how to automatically mount Hard Disk Drives, SSD, USB, and any other mountable storage drives in Linux. We will do this by finding the drive information including the mount point and UUID. We will then create a new mount directory and edit the fstab file with all the information needed to set up auto-mount on startup. There is a full...
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9 Replies
wolfyreload
wolfyreload6mo ago
Have a look at Nick's guide in the Bazzite documentation for auto mounting drives https://universal-blue.discourse.group/docs?topic=970
Universal Blue
Auto-Mounting Secondary Drives
Thanks, I fixed it now.
MrPech0
MrPech0OP6mo ago
In the GUi of KDE PM, I cant seem to find the “Edit Mount Point” option. Do you know where it is?
wolfyreload
wolfyreload6mo ago
Have a look in the menu. Device >> Select Current Device >> Make sure that you selecting the right device. If you on the right device, you might need to unmount it first before you have the option to mount it
MrPech0
MrPech0OP6mo ago
It should be here, right?
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wolfyreload
wolfyreload6mo ago
It's a bit weird that it's not showing your a partition table at all. But try right click on the partition where I've added the arrow and see if you can see the "Edit Mount Point Option"
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MrPech0
MrPech0OP6mo ago
Clicking there, the same options:(
wolfyreload
wolfyreload6mo ago
if you run sudo fdisk -x it should give you all the available disks. You might need to manually add the entry in the /etc/fstab file. Think it's further down in the guide with the more advanced way. I didn't know that it was possible to have a disk that is usable without a partition table
MrPech0
MrPech0OP6mo ago
Could it be because its in NTFS format?
Solution
MrPech0
MrPech06mo ago
Okay, I didnt really understood at first, but used this video to get it, since its easier understanding visually.
TechHut
YouTube
How to Auto Mount Drives in Linux on Boot
Reviewing how to automatically mount Hard Disk Drives, SSD, USB, and any other mountable storage drives in Linux. We will do this by finding the drive information including the mount point and UUID. We will then create a new mount directory and edit the fstab file with all the information needed to set up auto-mount on startup. There is a full...
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