SSgt Mark Lines 1308552 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>In order to use non-Linux partitions you have to mount them first. I prefer to have them mount automatically when the machine boots. For years, I have been manually editing my fstab to do this. Is there perhaps a better way? What tool do you use to automount non-Linux partitions on boot? 2016-02-17T02:27:12-05:00 SSgt Mark Lines 1308552 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>In order to use non-Linux partitions you have to mount them first. I prefer to have them mount automatically when the machine boots. For years, I have been manually editing my fstab to do this. Is there perhaps a better way? What tool do you use to automount non-Linux partitions on boot? 2016-02-17T02:27:12-05:00 2016-02-17T02:27:12-05:00 SSG Nathaniel Bendel 1309525 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>There may be installable applications out there that make it &quot;easier&quot; and most distros probably come with their own flavor but with most things like this I prefer to stick with the most basic methods that require no third party applications and work across distros. fstab is the way to go. Response by SSG Nathaniel Bendel made Feb 17 at 2016 12:19 PM 2016-02-17T12:19:46-05:00 2016-02-17T12:19:46-05:00 2016-02-17T02:27:12-05:00