I'm interested in building a live, bootable OpenBSD CD for forensics, cloning and data recovery. Basically, boot and try to automatically bring up any existing network interface. I'm not interesated in a GUI or play things... only good, old-fashioned Unix tools like dd, netcat, md5, etc.
I've googled and found some older info about building live CDs from OpenBSD, but I wanted to ask misc to see what folks think... good idea or bad? If it seems a reasonable task and I am able to do it, I'd like to do it so that it is easy to follow -current. So when -current get's new hardware support, I can redo my live CD to take advantage of that. I think OpenBSD is a good choice for something like this as it is very simple and straight-forward, but again, I wanted to ask here for other's opinions before doing much. Thanks, -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/Live-OpenBSD-Bootable-i386-CD-tp23125011p23125011.html Sent from the openbsd user - misc mailing list archive at Nabble.com.