Search Members Help

» Welcome Guest
[ Log In :: Register ]

Mini-ITX Boards Sale, Fanless BareBones Mini-ITX, Bootable 1G DSL USBs, 533MHz Fanless PC <-- SALE $200 each!
Get The Official Damn Small Linux Book. DSL Market , Great VPS hosting provided by Tektonic
Pages: (2) </ [1] 2 >/

[ Track this topic :: Email this topic :: Print this topic ]

reply to topic new topic new poll
Topic: Installing on USB, but NOT the 'live' install, So would like read/write from USB< Next Oldest | Next Newest >
Chanchao Offline





Group: Members
Posts: 4
Joined: Oct. 2005
Posted: Oct. 06 2005,04:20 QUOTE

Not sure if this is the right sub-forum to ask as obviously I'm installing to a 512MB USB pen drive, not to HD.

Here's roughly what I want: I want to have a full, writable installation on a pendrive and be able to boot it on various computers, to always have my own environment with me. Also this should be more secure on strange computers. (keyloggers, etc)

I installed to USB, however it installed a 'live' version, so with everything on RAM drive.  (I don't think I want this, but if you think I should want this for my purposes then do tell :) )

So I'm looking for a 'HD install' on USB.  The Wiki seems very limited, I just couldn't find this explained anywhere.  Can someone point me in the right direction?

Thanks loads!!
Back to top
Profile PM 
baxxter Offline





Group: Members
Posts: 1
Joined: Oct. 2005
Posted: Oct. 06 2005,09:40 QUOTE

Heya Chanchao,

I am tryint to do the same thing. I started about 3 days ago. Here is what i have figured out thus far: (some might be very basic or needless, but maybe it helps)

- install on a usb pen works rather nicely.
- there is a feature on the live-usb-dsl that lets you save your settings. its under system -> backup something something. basically you specify a device, take a backup of config data, mail etc., write it to the device when logging out and reading it back when logging in again
- so much for the theory. hasnt worked for me yet.
- i have  partitions on the stick (512 as well): sda1 has dsl (50mb), sda2 has my data, mydsl extensions etc. works nicely, slow on startup though (starting mydsl with OOo, gimp, gaim, gtk2 on a USB 1.1 Port takes about 5 Minutes)

so much for now. i consider this a workaround with which i *could* live if i had to. however having a real install on a usb stick like you said above would make me a lot happier. maybe someone else has an idea?
Back to top
Profile PM 
Chanchao Offline





Group: Members
Posts: 4
Joined: Oct. 2005
Posted: Oct. 06 2005,09:52 QUOTE

Doesn't work for me either.. Even though I make a backup, it seems it wants to read it from /cdrom even though I do everything from the USB stick.. (Computer doesn't even HAVE a cdrom).   So everytime I start it I get the same default settings back. :-(
Back to top
Profile PM 
cbagger01 Offline





Group: Members
Posts: 4264
Joined: Oct. 2003
Posted: Oct. 06 2005,16:28 QUOTE

/cdrom is the mountpoint for your bootable USB installation.

DSL treats your USB drive like a CDROM drive when booting from a livecd, so some of the terminology is confusing.

Have you tried "sda1" for the backup device?
Back to top
Profile PM 
Chanchao Offline





Group: Members
Posts: 4
Joined: Oct. 2005
Posted: Oct. 07 2005,05:14 QUOTE

Just tried it again..  Wiped the USB stick clean and did another USB install.  For boot options I made sure to specify 'restore=sda1' just in case.

It still doesn't work. If I do a manual backup and specify sda1 then I can see a backup file (.tar.gz) being created on the USB stick.  However when I reboot then my settings and a test file I put in my /home/dsl folder are not put back.  Also I get the default wallpaper. (Though an additional wallpaper image that I had put into the .fluxbox folder PRIOR to doing the USB install DID come back!!  So apparently that file was put on the USB install.

Also when I do a manual restore then the file doesn't come back.

I check the filetools.lst file and it includes /home/dsl  ; that means it should be automatically backed up, right?

When I shutdown I see it trying to back things up.. some long command that ends in /dev/null..  Is that correct?

It seems all of this does happen automatically when I use Puppy Linux, however that one has issues with USB keyboards so it's basically not an option.
Back to top
Profile PM 
5 replies since Oct. 06 2005,04:20 < Next Oldest | Next Newest >

[ Track this topic :: Email this topic :: Print this topic ]

Pages: (2) </ [1] 2 >/
reply to topic new topic new poll
Quick Reply: Installing on USB, but NOT the 'live' install

Do you wish to enable your signature for this post?
Do you wish to enable emoticons for this post?
Track this topic
View All Emoticons
View iB Code