t using an LVM snapshot.
> There's still some charm to Santiago's approach: the device is (nearly?)
> read-only after install.
I'm not sure I see the difference: the LVM snapshot can also be tagged
as read-only.
In both cases (LVM snapshot or overlayfs) the overall sy
On Wed, Aug 18, 2021 at 10:24:27PM -0400, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > I wanted to do something exactly like that some months ago.
> > What I ended up doing is using a normal Debian installation
> > with an overlay file system mounted over the root.
>
> FWIW, you can do simpler and just use a normal
> I wanted to do something exactly like that some months ago.
> What I ended up doing is using a normal Debian installation
> with an overlay file system mounted over the root.
FWIW, you can do simpler and just use a normal Debian install on
a USB key. That saves the trouble of the overlay filesy
Cmdte Alpha Tigre Z writes:
> I wanted to do something exactly like that some months ago.
> What I ended up doing is using a normal Debian installation
> with an overlay file system mounted over the root.
> It is too tricky to get the live images working with persistence.
Thanks, bu
El mié, 18 ago 2021 a las 8:38, Anssi Saari () escribió:
>
>
> I've tried a couple of ways to get a USB stick to boot (bios not efi)
> with persistence from debian-live-11.0.0-amd64-kde+nonfree.iso. Just
> stuffing that to the stick produces a working stick, just no
> pers
d the bundled syslinux MBR in
the stick MBR and managed to boot.
So, looks like Debian Live with persistence really likes to mount and/or
fsck any partitions it finds. Crazy.
GRML also worked, much the same as Debian with persistence. Video card
still refuses to work. Oh well, no rush to upgrade to Bullseye.
965/how-to-create-a-debian-live-usb-with-persistence
look somewhat plausible.
"Debian live with persistence." by F.Hauri is quite an interesting hack,
whereas "Using mkusb (BIOS/UEFI)" by sudodus is a main use case of "mkusb",
of which sudodus is the developer. He'
I've tried a couple of ways to get a USB stick to boot (bios not efi)
with persistence from debian-live-11.0.0-amd64-kde+nonfree.iso. Just
stuffing that to the stick produces a working stick, just no
persistence.
The sparse instructions at
https://wiki.debian.org/DebianLive/LiveUsbPersis
Hello! I'm Tyler.
I desperately need help setting up full persistence on my 8 Gigabyte flash
drive. I already know how to create a partition. I have made one called
"persistence" as an ext4. It is set at Primary, as well as the boot
partition. I then proceeded to your manual at
On Wed, 11 Nov 2015 10:51:37 -0500
Matilda Fins wrote:
Hello Matilda,
Cc'ing, as it seems you may not be subscribed to list.
>Is there a way to create a Debian live usb flash drive with
>persistence? If so, how?
At least two replies exist in the thread where you asked the sa
On Wednesday 11 November 2015 15:51:37 Matilda Fins wrote:
> Is there a way to create a Debian live usb flash drive with persistence? If
> so, how?
Are you subscribed? You have had replies which you seem not to have seen.
Lisi
Is there a way to create a Debian live usb flash drive with persistence?
> If so, how?
>
--
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The Heath
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Cheshire
WA7 4QX
Tel. 01 928 515 015
Is there a way to create a Debian live usb flash drive with persistence? If
so, how?
Yes, install the package live-build and read the documentation. The
mailing-list debian-live can help you.
--
Gerard
___
***
* Created with "mutt 1.5.23" *
* under Debian Linux JESSIE version 8.1 *
* R
On Wed, Nov 11, 2015 at 7:09 AM, Matilda Fins wrote:
> Is there a way to create a Debian live usb flash drive with persistence?
> If so, how?
>
The following article illustrates this
Linux Community Blogs
<https://www.linux.com/community/blogs/133-general-linux/420179-creating-a-deb
Is there a way to create a Debian live usb flash drive with persistence? If
so, how?
Hi, Richard.
Thank you for your nice tip!
> I think I would have tried for full persistence in your example with only one
> line in the persistence.conf file of something like:
>
> echo "/ union" > /media/usb0/persistence.conf
By only this single line in persistenc
On Sat, 25 Apr 2015 14:16:21 -0300, Teresa e Junior wrote:
I have always used clipboard managers in Linux, but for more than one
year already I have noticed that clipboard persistence is lost on the
desktop some hours after booting (the ability to paste after closing the
source application, see
I have always used clipboard managers in Linux, but for more than one
year already I have noticed that clipboard persistence is lost on the
desktop some hours after booting (the ability to paste after closing the
source application, see https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ClipboardPersistence). I
copy the
On Tue, 16 Apr 2013, Brian wrote:
> On Mon 15 Apr 2013 at 21:29:22 -0300, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> > On Mon, 15 Apr 2013, Brian wrote:
> > > That cannot happen. Updating the system might alter grub.cfg but GRUB
> > > itself is not installed or reinstalled to, for example, the MBR of any
On Mon 15 Apr 2013 at 21:29:22 -0300, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> On Mon, 15 Apr 2013, Brian wrote:
> > That cannot happen. Updating the system might alter grub.cfg but GRUB
> > itself is not installed or reinstalled to, for example, the MBR of any
> > disk.
>
> This is not entirely corr
Hi Michael,
On 2013-04-15 15:26, Michael Heerdegen wrote:
>> [...]
>
> Thanks for the hints, it now works! I labeled the partition
> `persistence', but to get it work, I also had to put a persistence.conf
> file on it.
> [...]
>
> Many thanks,
>
> Michae
On Mon, 15 Apr 2013, Brian wrote:
> That cannot happen. Updating the system might alter grub.cfg but GRUB
> itself is not installed or reinstalled to, for example, the MBR of any
> disk.
This is not entirely correct. You need to put all grub* packages on hold to
make sure it won't ever update the
Brian writes:
> > When I upgrade the system after some time has passed - it might
> > happen that grub is installed to the hdd and the notebook won't
> > start anymore. So I'll try to get live work first.
>
> That cannot happen. Updating the system might alter grub.cfg but GRUB
> itself is not
o use Debian live
> > > (http://live-build.debian.net/cgi-bin/live-build) on a 468 Laptop
> > > installed on a flash drive with full persistence.
> > >
> > I used to use Debian Live with persistence, but lately I've changed to a
> > much easier method. No
Hi Christer,
> First of all, I have another architecture (amd64) and I never got
> persistence to work with stable (Squeeze).
> But it works really well with testing (Wheezy) using the regular
> iso-hybrid .iso image.
>
> There is a link to a very helpful instruction in my pre
gt; > installed on a flash drive with full persistence.
> >
> I used to use Debian Live with persistence, but lately I've changed to a
> much easier method. Now I just do a normal Debian install but install
> it to a USB stick instead of a hard drive. Works fine. I make some
>
Hi Michael,
On 2013-04-13 20:50, Michael Heerdegen wrote:
> Hi,
>
> hope this is the right forum for my question.
>
> I wanted to use Debian live
> (http://live-build.debian.net/cgi-bin/live-build) on a 468 Laptop
> installed on a flash drive with full persistence.
-build) on a 468 Laptop
>> installed on a flash drive with full persistence.
>>
> I used to use Debian Live with persistence, but lately I've changed to a
> much easier method. Now I just do a normal Debian install but install
> it to a USB stick instead of a hard drive.
On Sat, Apr 13, 2013 at 08:50:06PM +0200, Michael Heerdegen wrote:
> Hi,
>
> hope this is the right forum for my question.
>
> I wanted to use Debian live
> (http://live-build.debian.net/cgi-bin/live-build) on a 468 Laptop
> installed on a flash drive with full persiste
Hi,
hope this is the right forum for my question.
I wanted to use Debian live
(http://live-build.debian.net/cgi-bin/live-build) on a 468 Laptop
installed on a flash drive with full persistence.
I followed the recipe given here:
https://www.linux.com/community/blogs/133-general-linux/420179
Greetings,
On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 12:22 AM, Kousik Maiti wrote:
> Hi lists,
>
> I created one persistence usb through http://www.linuxliveusb.com/ .
Not sure of the above but if you are using a Debian Live image then read on.
> Then
> add some packges into that.
> Can the c
On Tue, 14 Sep 2010 16:51:44 +0530, Kousik Maiti wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 4:22 PM, Camaleón wrote:
>
>> You'll have to get further info. It can be a problem for setting the
>> monitor/vga correctly.
>>
>> Any error on logs ("/var/log/Xorg.0.log" or "~/.xsession-errors"?
>>
> I can't find
On Tue, 14 Sep 2010 16:15:14 +0530, Kousik Maiti wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 3:43 PM, Camaleón wrote:
>
>> I think you can have some problems with drivers to get all detected
>> devices working properly (mostly peripherals) in the LiveUSB (not in
>> virtual machine mode), but as long as you
On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 3:43 PM, Camaleón wrote:
> On Tue, 14 Sep 2010 10:52:41 +0530, Kousik Maiti wrote:
>
> > I created one persistence usb through http://www.linuxliveusb.com/ .
> > Then add some packges into that.
>
> By "packages" you mean programs or
On Tue, 14 Sep 2010 10:52:41 +0530, Kousik Maiti wrote:
> I created one persistence usb through http://www.linuxliveusb.com/ .
> Then add some packges into that.
By "packages" you mean programs or driver/modules?
> Can the created persistence usb portable through differen
Hi lists,
I created one persistence usb through http://www.linuxliveusb.com/ . Then
add some packges into that.
Can the created persistence usb portable through different hardware? If no
then what modifications required to make it portable through different
hardware?
Thanks in advanced
On Saturday 26 August 2006 06:40, Alan Chandler wrote:
...
>
> >- I found the guidance at
> >http://www.planamente.ch/emidio/pages/linux_howto_root_lvm_raid.php
> >to be very helpful
>
> Indeed, in there it says you need to do
>
> cd /etc/mdadm
>echo 'DEVICE /dev/hd*[0-9] /dev/sd*[0-9]' > mda
[Apologies this doesn't thread properly, but I didn't get the messages from
the list covering the time my mail server was down - the reason was I had
forgotten to allocate swap space in my new configuration - so I have had to
reply to the message by copy and pasting from an archive]
On 2006-08-2
Chandler, Alan wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Damon L. Chesser [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 25 August 2006 14:56
To: Chandler, Alan
Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Problem with Raid Array persistence across reboots.
Chandler, Alan wrote:
[Apologies if this has
-Original Message-
From: Damon L. Chesser [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 25 August 2006 14:56
To: Chandler, Alan
Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Problem with Raid Array persistence across reboots.
Chandler, Alan wrote:
> [Apologies if this has already been sent. My h
I recently set up a Sarge box, with raid and LVM. It took a while, and
there where a bunch of nits that had to be worked through, but now it's
been running stably for a month or so, and everthing comes back back
after reboots.
So, in case it helps:
- I found the guidance at
http://www.plana
Chandler, Alan wrote:
[Apologies if this has already been sent. My home computer systems
seems to be falling around my ears as I have changed all the disks
around, and I desperately need to ask the question below and get an
answer, so I can rebuild my desktop system, and thus release some disks
Chandler, Alan wrote:
>
> I created a raid array with mdadm, thus
>
> mdadm --create=/dev/md0 --level=1 --raid-devices=2 /dev/sd[ab]4
>
> and then turned /dev/md0 into a LVM physical volume, volume group and
> some logical volumes.
>
> This worked great until I rebooted, at which point the
On (25/08/06 13:13), Chandler, Alan wrote:
> I created a raid array with mdadm, thus
>
> mdadm --create=/dev/md0 --level=1 --raid-devices=2 /dev/sd[ab]4
>
> and then turned /dev/md0 into a LVM physical volume, volume group and
> some logical volumes.
>
> This worked great until I rebooted, at
[Apologies if this has already been sent. My home computer systems
seems to be falling around my ears as I have changed all the disks
around, and I desperately need to ask the question below and get an
answer, so I can rebuild my desktop system, and thus release some disks
acting as backup on my s
--
Subject: Devfs & /dev permission persistence
Date: Mon, 10 Jun 2002 11:53:06 -0400
From: "Luo, Ling" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
According to the devfs.readme, I disabled the devfs automount at boot time
to enable dev file permission persistence to work(
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