Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-24 Thread Giles Orr via talk
On Wed, 20 Sept 2023 at 15:16, BCLUG via talk  wrote:
>
> bitmap via talk wrote on 2023-09-20 10:02:
>
> > Does this OpenSUSE image come with a broad range of tools? The debian,
> > ubuntu, manjaro and others I have lying around are just the very basics.
> > Am often missing something needed.
>
> I seem to recall that Knoppix was a popular distro for repairing broken
> systems. This may be out-dated though.
>
>
> Also, ventoy is a tool that allows multiple bootable distros on a single
> USB stick, and I think allows some persistent storage.
>
> i.e. Use ventoy to install knoppix / whatever on a stick, boot the stick
> and install any missing tools, configure sshd, add scripts, etc., then
> next boot time everything ought to be available.
>
>
> I haven't yet tried this myself, just giving my 2¢ on how I'd approach
> things.

I started using Knoppix about 25 years ago.  Development has slowed,
but there are still occasional releases - the most recent being 9.1
from 2021-01.  It will boot on just about anything x86 or amd64 (at 4G
or less memory it switches to a simpler interface ... it may even
choke down to text mode eventually?), and come up to a fairly simple
GUI with pretty much all the tools you could hope for.  It remains my
go-to for recovery and repartitioning.  I'm still using v7.7.1 (2016 -
LXDE interface) because that's what's on my bootable USB stick: it has
thousands of tools, but ones I checked for today include 'inxi',
'gparted', and 'lshw'.  Keep in mind this is the DVD version which has
more tools than the CD version.  Most of the command line tools are
still on the CD, the bulk of the DVD space is for less interesting
stuff like Libre Office.

Ventoy sounds great, haven't tried it yet.  I suspect raw Knoppix will
boot on more machines than Ventoy, but that's idle speculation and a
quarter century of success with Knoppix talking.

http://knopper.net/knoppix-mirrors/index-en.html
http://knoppix.net/get.php

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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-22 Thread James Knott via talk

On 2023-09-20 13:50, bitmap wrote:
IME the bootable linux systems are typically read only. Sure you can 
install anything transiently. Once you connect to the internet, 
configure the repos, add keys, update the package lists, possibly run 
an update of the whole system, and idiosyncratic troubleshooting per 
distro/release/platform. Then you can install something, probably. 
But, if you reboot, it is all gone and you have to do it all over 
again. And when it comes to repairing the system there is a lot of 
rebooting.


I might try it if you are saying the open suse behaves in a different 
way than the others, but are you?


This one does what you want.  I just installed Wireshark on it and it 
survives a reboot.


https://download.opensuse.org/tumbleweed/iso/openSUSE-Tumbleweed-KDE-Live-x86_64-Snapshot20230920-Media.iso.mirrorlist
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread Kevin Cozens via talk

On 2023-09-19 23:22, bitmap via talk wrote:
I'd really like to have a good USB key to boot from when some kind of 
problem happens.


As was mentioned you can use a live CD/DVD. I use Linux Mint (although I'm 
thinking of moving to Debian testing) but it has the same issue that Fedora 
and other live images have and that is it doesn't have gparted. If you have 
an Internet connection it is a simple "apt get" away.


One other option is to use Hiren's. The version I originally had booted in 
to a text only display and included lots of useful programs and tools for 
examining and fixing a machine. It has been updated to boot in to a 
graphical environment now. I don't know how current it is. You can find it 
at https://www.hirensbootcd.org/.


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| distract the mouth-breathers, and
Owner of Elecraft K2 #2172  | that's why we're powerful"
#include  | --Chris Hardwick

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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread BCLUG via talk


[Re-sending this message, didn't get copy. Apologies if duplicate.]



bitmap via talk wrote on 2023-09-20 10:02:

Does this OpenSUSE image come with a broad range of tools? The debian, 
ubuntu, manjaro and others I have lying around are just the very basics. 
Am often missing something needed.


I seem to recall that Knoppix was a popular distro for repairing broken 
systems. This may be out-dated though.



Also, ventoy is a tool that allows multiple bootable distros on a single 
USB stick, and I think allows some persistent storage.


i.e. Use ventoy to install knoppix / whatever on a stick, boot the stick 
and install any missing tools, configure sshd, add scripts, etc., then 
next boot time everything ought to be available.



I haven't yet tried this myself, just giving my 2¢ on how I'd approach 
things.



rb
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread BCLUG via talk

bitmap via talk wrote on 2023-09-20 10:02:

Does this OpenSUSE image come with a broad range of tools? The debian, 
ubuntu, manjaro and others I have lying around are just the very basics. 
Am often missing something needed.


I seem to recall that Knoppix was a popular distro for repairing broken 
systems. This may be out-dated though.



Also, ventoy is a tool that allows multiple bootable distros on a single 
USB stick, and I think allows some persistent storage.


i.e. Use ventoy to install knoppix / whatever on a stick, boot the stick 
and install any missing tools, configure sshd, add scripts, etc., then 
next boot time everything ought to be available.



I haven't yet tried this myself, just giving my 2¢ on how I'd approach 
things.



rb
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread D. Hugh Redelmeier via talk
| From: joeDoe via talk 

| Anything that you need that isn't on the live system can be easily installed
| if it's packaged for Debian. It's a full system, so you can also download
| and compile something that isn't packaged in Debian if you need to do so.

To install gparted on the currently running live Fedora system, I just
type this into a terminal window:
sudo dnf install gparted

On debian and descendants, it should be (UNTESTED):
sudo apt install gparted

- this requires internet connectivity.  I usually use a wired
  connection so that I don't have to bother with a WiFi password.

- You could supply the gparted RPM in another way (eg. on another stick)
  but you may find that there are dependencies on as-yet-uninstalled
  packages.  Starts to get to be work.

- the live system is generally way behind on current updates.  You
  probably don't want to waste your time applying them since they will
  be washed away once you shut down the live system

- if your live system and the system on the hard drive are very
  different, there is a slight chance that the file systems are
  slightly incompatible.  I hate worrying about that so I try to match
  the OSes.



I've previously said the following on this list; feel free to skip.

When I get a computer preloaded with Windows, I immediately shrink the 
main Windows partition 100G (used to be 64G but I recently bumped into 
Windows 11 Update failures at that size).

gparted is great but not perfect at resizing NTFS filesystems (the Windows
native file system).  After resizing an NTFS filesystem with gparted,
the first thing you should do is boot Windows.  Windows will then
complete or repair the resizing done by gparted.

Superstition: I have had cases where I didn't immediately boot into Windows 
after
a gparted resizing.  Sometime Windows won't boot after that.

Why use gparted instead of Windows' own resizing tool?  Because you
cannot reduce the size to less than 50% of the original size with the
Window tool.  Why? Because there is metadata smack in the middle of
the volume and it is marked unmovable.  gparted is willing to move it
anyway.
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread joeDoe via talk
On Wed, Sep 20, 2023 at 01:02:28PM -0400, bitmap via talk wrote:
> Is there a distinction between a "live image" and the USB installer?  I
> think we are talking about the same thing; maybe I used inaccurate
> language.

In general, an installer will do nothing more than install a new system.
Most will probably have some shell access available to be able to do some
stuff outside of the installation, but usually only related to the
installation. It is limited as you say.

A live system gives you a complete working system that runs off the USB
key/CD/etc that you burned it to and memory, rather than the permanent
storage of the computer. Many live systems will also permit you to
subsequently install them to the permanent storage of the computer, but you
are not required to.

> 
> Does this OpenSUSE image come with a broad range of tools?  The debian,
> ubuntu, manjaro and others I have lying around are just the very basics. 
> Am often missing something needed.

Anything that you need that isn't on the live system can be easily installed
if it's packaged for Debian. It's a full system, so you can also download
and compile something that isn't packaged in Debian if you need to do so.

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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread bitmap via talk
https://www.system-rescue.org This is a likely candidate 
https://www.system-rescue.org/System-tools Has a lot of the system tools that 
might be needed
https://www.system-rescue.org/manual/Installing_packages_with_pacman  You can 
even add packages
https://www.system-rescue.org/manual/Creating_a_backing_store/ And it has some 
kind of persistent storage though I am unsure what limits would be

I am surprised to see it is arch-based with arch repos/AUR via pacman/helper. 
My experience with manjaro using it in the past year or so is that you need to 
be constantly updating it as per the "rolling release model". If updates are 
neglected you will run into some big mess. I don't find any comment on the 
distro choice in the docs. But since a rescue disk is something you would 
(hopefully!) have lying around for ages without need for it, it seems like 
using arch would introduce a lot of potential chaos. I was anticipating some 
kind of LTS debian etc for this kind of use case. 

Other than that, looks perfect. Anyone have thoughts on the arch thing?

On Wed, Sep 20, 2023, at 6:51 AM, o1bigtenor via talk wrote:
> I have found "SystemRescueDisc" (IIRC the actual name) to be a
> most wonderful tool in this kind of situation.
> Included is gparted - - - one would have to add one's own keys and files
> though. I first started using this on a CD, think I have a copy on
> stick somewhere.
> (Should make sure to either find it or create another!)
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread bitmap via talk
Thanks that could be useful. I will give it a spin. Gparted is indeed one of 
those tools who's absence can be problematic. Some of the install media include 
it and some don't.

I tried looking to see if there was some kind of stand alone binary gparted I 
could keep on hand, like a windows portable exe file. Nothing that I found. 
Maybe you'd need to use one of those formats like appimage? 

On Tue, Sep 19, 2023, at 11:28 PM, Nicholas Krause wrote:
> There are a variety of repair distributions out there. Seems one good one at 
> least from memory is: https://www.supergrubdisk.org/rescatux/. I've not tried 
> it but seems
> to maybe be what you require.
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread bitmap via talk
Is there a distinction between a "live image" and the USB installer? I think we 
are talking about the same thing; maybe I used inaccurate language. 

Does this OpenSUSE image come with a broad range of tools? The debian, ubuntu, 
manjaro and others I have lying around are just the very basics. Am often 
missing something needed. 

On Wed, Sep 20, 2023, at 8:22 AM, James Knott via talk wrote:
> On 2023-09-19 23:22, bitmap via talk wrote:
> > Is there some kind of general purpose image that has a variety of 
> > programs, maybe even foundational documentation on board, etc, that is 
> > designed for this? There are images like clonezilla to solve specific 
> > problems but that's another story. I would like a multi tool on hand. 
> 
> Some distros have live images.  I know openSUSE does.
> 
> https://download.opensuse.org/distribution/leap/15.4/live/
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread Scott Allen via talk
On Wed, 20 Sept 2023 at 11:48, joeDoe via talk  wrote:
> Debian also publishes live images:

It would be a lot less work to list distributions that DON'T have live images.

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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread joeDoe via talk
On Wed, Sep 20, 2023 at 08:22:28AM -0400, James Knott via talk wrote:
> On 2023-09-19 23:22, bitmap via talk wrote:
> > Is there some kind of general purpose image that has a variety of
> > programs, maybe even foundational documentation on board, etc, that is
> > designed for this? There are images like clonezilla to solve specific
> > problems but that's another story. I would like a multi tool on hand.
> 
> Some distros have live images.  I know openSUSE does.
> 
> https://download.opensuse.org/distribution/leap/15.4/live/

Debian also publishes live images:

https://www.debian.org/CD/live/
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread William Park via talk
1. Use the distro iso to boot gui/text terminal.  Most distros are 
"live", so you don't need a separate "rescue" disk.


2. Use Ventoy.  It creates 2 partitions on USB stick, one Linux stuffs, 
and the other Windows partitions where you drop iso files.  When you 
boot, you can select which iso you want to boot from.  It works on some 
computers, but not all.


On 2023-09-19 23:22, bitmap via talk wrote:
I'd really like to have a good USB key to boot from when some kind of 
problem happens. Typically I use whatever installation media is lying 
around but they have really limited tools available. Not to mention tres 
obnoxious defaults like transparent terminals. Drive me nuts when some 
catastrophe is going on and the terminal is resetting to 50% opacity at 
every reboot.


Is there some kind of general purpose image that has a variety of 
programs, maybe even foundational documentation on board, etc, that is 
designed for this? There are images like clonezilla to solve specific 
problems but that's another story. I would like a multi tool on hand.


My research tells me that by booting from USB media, it's possible to 
install on a connected drive of any sort. Normally you use the internal 
hd but can use another external drive. Then you have a persistent 
bootable USB where you can install stuff + store files. *However* it is 
unique to that device so it'd be required to set up a USB key for each 
one. Not ideal although possibly worthwhile for the main computer.


Any advice on this issue? Seems like I wouldn't have been the first 
person to have this idea. Is it a bad idea? Why? If not, how to set up?


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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread Aurelian Melinte via talk

On 19/09/2023 23:22, bitmap via talk wrote:

I'd really like to have a good USB key to boot from when some kind of
problem happens. Typically I use whatever installation media is lying
around but they have really limited tools available. Not to mention
tres obnoxious defaults like transparent terminals. Drive me nuts when
some catastrophe is going on and the terminal is resetting to 50%
opacity at every reboot.

Is there some kind of general purpose image that has a variety of
programs, maybe even foundational documentation on board, etc, that is
designed for this? There are images like clonezilla to solve specific
problems but that's another story. I would like a multi tool on hand.


I use  one usb https://www.ventoy.net/en/index.html You can drop on it
multiple iso images to boot from. I use
https://www.system-rescue.org/Download/ iso + other iso images like
clonezilla and an live Ubuntu iso



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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread James Knott via talk

On 2023-09-19 23:22, bitmap via talk wrote:
Is there some kind of general purpose image that has a variety of 
programs, maybe even foundational documentation on board, etc, that is 
designed for this? There are images like clonezilla to solve specific 
problems but that's another story. I would like a multi tool on hand. 


Some distros have live images.  I know openSUSE does.

https://download.opensuse.org/distribution/leap/15.4/live/
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread o1bigtenor via talk
On Wed, Sep 20, 2023 at 1:56 AM D. Hugh Redelmeier via talk
 wrote:
>
> 1. I use what I'm used to.  That's Fedora.
>
> 2. I don't plan ahead, so I just use the Fedora live installation medium
>
> 3. Your distro is probably as good as Fedora.
>
> 4. Yes, you can install to a USB drive and have that drive function as an
>emergency tool.  But I find that I don't use the emergency tool enough
>to be worth that investment in time.
>
>The main advantage is that you can make changes to the system and they
>persist.
>
> 6. What I miss on the Fedora live installation medium:
>- gparted
>- my private SSH keys
>- my notes files
>
> 7. My Fedora Live Installation stick has lots of free space.
>I've never figured out whether I could add a file-system to
>store persistent state.
>
> 8. There are systems to allow multiple installation images (.iso)
>to live on a single stick.  I haven't tried ventoy.
> ---

I have found "SystemRescueDisc" (IIRC the actual name) to be a
most wonderful tool in this kind of situation.
Included is gparted - - - one would have to add one's own keys and files
though. I first started using this on a CD, think I have a copy on
stick somewhere.
(Should make sure to either find it or create another!)

HTH
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-20 Thread D. Hugh Redelmeier via talk
1. I use what I'm used to.  That's Fedora.

2. I don't plan ahead, so I just use the Fedora live installation medium

3. Your distro is probably as good as Fedora.

4. Yes, you can install to a USB drive and have that drive function as an 
   emergency tool.  But I find that I don't use the emergency tool enough 
   to be worth that investment in time.

   The main advantage is that you can make changes to the system and they 
   persist.

6. What I miss on the Fedora live installation medium:
   - gparted
   - my private SSH keys
   - my notes files

7. My Fedora Live Installation stick has lots of free space.
   I've never figured out whether I could add a file-system to
   store persistent state.

8. There are systems to allow multiple installation images (.iso)
   to live on a single stick.  I haven't tried ventoy.
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Re: [GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-19 Thread Nicholas Krause via talk



On 9/19/23 23:22, bitmap via talk wrote:

I'd really like to have a good USB key to boot from when some kind of problem 
happens. Typically I use whatever installation media is lying around but they 
have really limited tools available. Not to mention tres obnoxious defaults 
like transparent terminals. Drive me nuts when some catastrophe is going on and 
the terminal is resetting to 50% opacity at every reboot.

Is there some kind of general purpose image that has a variety of programs, 
maybe even foundational documentation on board, etc, that is designed for this? 
There are images like clonezilla to solve specific problems but that's another 
story. I would like a multi tool on hand.

My research tells me that by booting from USB media, it's possible to install 
on a connected drive of any sort. Normally you use the internal hd but can use 
another external drive. Then you have a persistent bootable USB where you can 
install stuff + store files. *However* it is unique to that device so it'd be 
required to set up a USB key for each one. Not ideal although possibly 
worthwhile for the main computer.

Any advice on this issue? Seems like I wouldn't have been the first person to 
have this idea. Is it a bad idea? Why? If not, how to set up?


Hi,
There are a variety of repair distributions out there. Seems one good one at 
least from memory is: https://www.supergrubdisk.org/rescatux/. I've not tried 
it but seems
to maybe be what you require.

Nick
 


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[GTALUG] looking for a general purpose boot media to keep in case of distasters

2023-09-19 Thread bitmap via talk
I'd really like to have a good USB key to boot from when some kind of problem 
happens. Typically I use whatever installation media is lying around but they 
have really limited tools available. Not to mention tres obnoxious defaults 
like transparent terminals. Drive me nuts when some catastrophe is going on and 
the terminal is resetting to 50% opacity at every reboot.

Is there some kind of general purpose image that has a variety of programs, 
maybe even foundational documentation on board, etc, that is designed for this? 
There are images like clonezilla to solve specific problems but that's another 
story. I would like a multi tool on hand. 

My research tells me that by booting from USB media, it's possible to install 
on a connected drive of any sort. Normally you use the internal hd but can use 
another external drive. Then you have a persistent bootable USB where you can 
install stuff + store files. *However* it is unique to that device so it'd be 
required to set up a USB key for each one. Not ideal although possibly 
worthwhile for the main computer. 

Any advice on this issue? Seems like I wouldn't have been the first person to 
have this idea. Is it a bad idea? Why? If not, how to set up?---
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