You got me there, cowboooy, with default installation, as I was not making sense.
I meant during the install on your hard drive, where it says such things as 'install on free space' or 'use largest empty partition' Sorry, I can't recall the exact wording, but I always select to manually install on the partitions of my choice, and then let it format to the filesystem I want, usually ext4.
There are clues there in your fstab, but I don't have the smarts to give you helpful answers, but the simple one, to re-install.
Here's my output, as I have two hard drives, the first one is primary with ntfs file system, and the second one (only one shown in my fstab file) is partitioned as extended, and in that entire extended drive are smaller logical partitions, with the middle of the drive itself a swap space. The logicals are where my Rosa root and Rosa home partition installs are. My other Linux distro isn't shown in fstab, only the swap partition. Your output seems a bit out of whack or not in order and I see an odd entry for /mnt /C and /mnt /D.
Код: Выделить всё
me@trying ~]$ cat /etc/fstab
# Entry for /dev/sdb5
LABEL=pocart / ext4 defaults 1 1
# Entry for /dev/sdb6 :
LABEL=pocahm /home ext4 defaults 1 2
none /proc proc defaults 0 0
# Entry for /dev/sdb7 :
UUID=numbersandlettershere swap swap defaults 0 0
Hopefully someone else can help you with this.
P.S. Edited to add, make sure you do not have any external drives such as USB thumb or GoFlex USB drives connected during install of distro, as these should show up under /media and not as a mounted partition in your fstab file. Unless, of course, you plan to install and run from such externals. I always make sure to unmount/remove them before using a partition editor, too, so as to not by accident alter them.