System is Arch Linux. NTFS-3G is installed. I have had this problem on Gnome (Nautilus) and KDE (Dolphin). I already tried fixing it with Testdisk. No success. Any help is appreciated.

UPDATE: I have re-formatted the disk and it is working now. Thank you for all your suggestions and tips.

  • Kerb
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    8 months ago

    thats probably part par of the course for the arch experience

    id check if Udisks is installed and running.

    • @nebulaoneOP
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      38 months ago

      Thanks, I will do that. Currently reading the ArchWiki entry on udisks.

    • @nebulaoneOP
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      28 months ago

      I ran Nautilus with root privileges, same error message. I will read about FUSE support, though, thanks.

  • @[email protected]
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    58 months ago

    I have no idea what that GUI thing is you’re using to do the mount, but I note that the CLI and the GUI are not using the same mountpoint. Is it possibly the case that the directory /mnt/storage2 exists but /run/media/void/2TB does not?

    • @nebulaoneOP
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      18 months ago

      When I create 2TB It tries to mount at 2TB1.

      • @nebulaoneOP
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        18 months ago

        GUI is the default Gnome file manager (Nautilus).

  • palordrolap
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    28 months ago

    If you’re using GNOME or a derivative, you should probably be using gio mount to do the same mounting as the file manager would. Then again, you say that the file manager isn’t working, so gio mount probably won’t work either.

    I admit I had no idea about the guts of this - and maybe still don’t - but the user who suggested looking at udisks is probably right. It’s always been there in the background as long as I remember (Mint/Cinnamon, many years), and has hooks into something I mounted with gio after the last reboot.

    Another search term that might help is “gvfs”, or GNOME virtual file system, which I’ve definitely poked around with before.

    Importantly, Nautilus and gio don’t need sudo because they call into what’s already running. They (or the subsystem) automatically create the mount point directory (and remove it on unmount). If the directory already exists, they use the “append a 1” technique you experienced, presumably so they don’t clobber or hide something that might be important.

    • @nebulaoneOP
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      18 months ago

      At this point I will probably just back up all the files and re-format the disk, as I can mount usb flash drives without any issue, so I am assuming there is something wrong with the external hard drive.