Hi, I would like to make a minimal Debian Stable -with only the packages I need- available as a LiveUSB bootable system (nomadic, USB-stick, which I can use in any desktop/laptop) with persistence and some way to upgrade it when next Stable gets published. Is there a standard procedure to achieve this?
In the Wiki I've found: https://wiki.debian.org/DebianLive/LiveUsbPersistence But it starts stating: «*Caution*: This needs an overhaul to reflect USB stick layout changes (ESP partition). Could not reproduce it working with a debian-live-11.2-amd64 image.» Anyway, the steps seem pretty similar to these ones, from Kali (Debian based): https://www.kali.org/docs/usb/usb-persistence/ It could be something similar to what MX (antiX based, which is Debian based) does: a non-writable LiveUSB bootable system (loading on RAM), and a couple of rootfs/homefs files that got the changes (from RAM) written upon when time is convenient (e.g., when shutting down). And maybe the LiveUSB bootable part could just be overwritten when a new Debian Stable gets published? Couldn't find more info online, so, maybe someone could point me in the right direction to keep reading... Kind regards, everybody, and thanks a lot in advance!

