Antonios Galanopoulos said : > Or you can change the live-rw label to something else: > > tune2fs -L notlive-rw /dev/sdb2
As a quick reminder, the partition based pertinence works like this: - at boot time, the live scripts are listing the partitions found on any storage devices on the system (external and internal). - if a partition is found and has the name 'live-rw' you will get persistence for the whole system (including messing around /etc) - if a partition is found and has the name 'home-rw' you will get persistence *only* for '/home' - if none of the partition are called like this, then you won't get persistence at all, so indeed, as Anton is suggesting, if you rename the persistence partition of the Puredyne liveUSB key to something else that the default 'live-rw', then it won't work anymore. More radical, you can also disable persistence completely, from syslinux or grub, edit the boot command for Puredyne and remove 'persistence', then, nothing will get scanned during the boot process. There also many other ways to use persistence (from disk images, "à la nest" to using compressed snapshot of a system that can be used to only remember changes to one single files or any selection of files/directories) but this not yet documented and fully tested - the brave ones can always man live-initramfs and read the persistence section of Debian Live, then test and write about it in the wikibook. a. -- http://su.kuri.mu --- [email protected] http://identi.ca/group/puredyne irc://irc.goto10.org/puredyne
