![]() ![]() You will possibly need to add it to as a permanent mount point (this also means it will always be in the same location). I believe the desktop will only mount when the user is logged on - something you generally don’t do on a server. But on February 29th 2016 the Raspberry Pi Foundation announced their latest board, the Raspberry Pi 3. As says, there are guides to adding NTFS support, if your drive is formatted that way. Recently we built a Plex Media Server using the Raspberry Pi 2, at the time the Raspberry Pi 2 was the most powerful board in the Raspberry Pi range. I’m not sure what level of support PiOS has. Writing access was considered “experimental” with Kernel drivers. NTFS has been read-only for over a decade, but writing files is more complicated and needed an external driver up until recently. The best way would be to use FAT32, which, if the video files are large, but under 4GB, is probably the most flexible way of doing things, if you are going to use the drive with other systems, otherwise format it native Linux. How are you mounting it? Have you added it to the list of mounted drives or are you relying on the desktop mounting system? The latter will only work with a logged on user, AFAIK.
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