Max
Group: Members
Posts: 211
Joined: July 2004 |
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Posted: Oct. 16 2004,22:52 |
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The live version doesn't need a swap partition. From my limited experience with DSL it seems you have a few options: 1. Run purely live and just use the backup facility to save the files you want (e.g. personal files) and configuration files to wherever (hard disk, USB key, CF card, etc.) 2. Run the live version, but from the hard disk. I think on this forum they call it a "frugal" install. This is actually pretty cool. You basically are putting the live CD image on a hard disk and booting to that. Then you put all you data files and DSL extension (e.g., ".dsl" files) on another partition and at boot you can tell DSL where to find them so you have access. The beauty of this setup is when a new version of DSL comes out or if you happen to trash you system, you just write the new ISO files over the DSL partition. 3. A traditional HD install. Everything is remembered from boot to boot, however, if you trash your system you may be in for some work to get it "right" again.
I've been using DSL about 5 months now and use the live cd on a couple of notebooks I have. I keep a CF card in one of the PCMCIA slots and make the backup to there. After some trail and error, I pretty much get "everything" back to how I like it from boot to boot.
Early in my use of DSL I did a full HD install to another notebook in the kitchen for my kids. (I finally got tired of reloading windows when they'd surf and invariably load some activeX tool bar or other spyware). Anyway, since I was new to DSL (and really to Linux) I didn't know quite what I was doing and there are some things on that machine that aren't exactly how I would like them now and some mistakes I made trying to install stuff. I think when I decide to upgrade that box to the next version, I'm going to go for the "frugal" HD install since I think it gives so much more flexibility.
One caveot though. If you end up using a lot of apps that you manually install (e.g. not available in the DSL repository) then the frugal install may not be the way to go as you would have to modify your install script to "re-install" these apps everytime you reboot. (If I'm wrong on this point, I'm sure someone will correct me.)
Hope this helps a little.
-------------- Using DSL on: IBM T42, IBM 560x, Dell Dimension CPx
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