On Tue, Oct 03, 2006 at 07:33:23AM -0700, Ottavio Caruso wrote: > Nuno Miguel dos Santos Baeta wrote: > > > Hi! > > > > I want to install Debian in a USB pen drive. > > Don't! Nothing should be installed on a flash drive. A traditional > install was meant for hard drives, not flash drives. Browser cache, > /tmp, syslog and so on will damage the device.
I have only loosely been following this thread, but am curious about this sort of thing in general. so what if you mount /tmp on tmpfs (thus putting it in memory or swap dependingon memory loads) and I wonder, can you change where syslog puts its logs (like into tmp) and then build some script to save it off when you shutdown? I assume you are trying to avoid the damage caused by longterm heavy writing which "wears out" flash memory, right? Likewise, what about putting together a file on whatever harddrive exists (a la knoppix and dsl use of a swapfile) as a place to mount /var and /tmp while running the system and again, copy it off to the usb drive during shutdown so that the info is archived, but the writes to flash are minimized. > > If you want to run a distro from a usb device, like I do, use a so > called 'frugall install': partition your drive in two (you can use > loop files if you prefer), put a live iso in the first partition and > save you data onto the second partition when you are done. > Knoppix, live.debian.net or damn Small Linux will do the job. > I agree that this is a much better solution. just my .02 A
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