I have a NTFS drive for Storage, which is shared between Win 11.

I want to change the location of (or replace) ~/Downloads, ~/Music, etc..,.

Note that the link to made is between NTFS and EXT4.

I found two ways while searching.

   1.Creating **Symlinks** in `~` with target pointed to folders in NTFS drive.

   2. **Mounting** the NTFS folders **directly** to`~/Downloads`, `~/Music`, etc..,.

Which one should I do? Which one is more beneficial?

Also how to mount folders to other folders (option 2) ? (I would really appreciate a GUI way)

I know this is not that important of a thing to post on Main Linux Community, but I already asked 2 linux4noobs community, and they are empty.




This is a continuation to my previous discussion, where most of the people said,

  1. It doesn't matter where I mount.

  2. Mount certain folders directly into home other. (like mounting /mnt/data/music to ~/music)

  • Samueru@lemmy.ml
    ·
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    would you suggest XDG or creating Symlinks?

    You can do both, and both are easy.

    The user-dirs.dirs file contains something like this:

    XDG_DESKTOP_DIR="$HOME/Desktop"
    XDG_DOCUMENTS_DIR="$HOME/Documents"
    XDG_DOWNLOAD_DIR="$HOME/Downloads"
    XDG_MUSIC_DIR="$HOME/Music"
    XDG_PICTURES_DIR="$HOME/Pictures"
    XDG_PUBLICSHARE_DIR="$HOME/Public"
    XDG_TEMPLATES_DIR="$HOME/Templates"
    XDG_VIDEOS_DIR="$HOME/Videos"
    

    For example if you mount the disk in /media/dirname, it would be something like this, I'm giving it a external-drive name in this example:

    XDG_DESKTOP_DIR="/media/external-drive/Desktop"
    XDG_DOCUMENTS_DIR="/media/external-drive/Documents"
    XDG_DOWNLOAD_DIR="/media/external-drive/Downloads"
    XDG_MUSIC_DIR="/media/external-drive/Music"
    XDG_PICTURES_DIR="/media/external-drive/Pictures"
    XDG_PUBLICSHARE_DIR="/media/external-drive/Public"
    XDG_TEMPLATES_DIR="/media/external-drive/Templates"
    XDG_VIDEOS_DIR="/media/external-drive/Videos"
    

    And for the symlinks, if the drive already has the Desktop, Documents, etc directories. It is as simple as this:

    ln -s /media/external-drive/* $HOME

    That will symlink all the files in the drive to your $HOME

    I suggest you do both because you might run into a program that doesn't follow XDG user directories.