Thanks Adrian for you answer. No, I didnt know that Linux Voyage had this feature. Is it documented somewhere? like that I could learn.
Like I told, I am a new on Linux system and voyage is my first Linux System. So sorry if I ask some 'stupid' question. I would like to use this mailing list to learn some things I dont find by myself on google or on archive. Hope I am welcome. Regards Emmanuel On Sat, 24 Sep 2011 20:40:29 +0200, Adrian Reyer <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sat, Sep 24, 2011 at 11:41:43AM +0200, [email protected] wrote: >> sdc1 is 512 Mo size and I initialy install Voyage on this partition, >> who will stay Read Only. >> sdc2 is a 2 Go size partion and are of course RW. > > With flash medium and Voyage, I dare an question the 'of course' > Are you aware Voyage does not only come with a readonly /, but as well > with a way to configure ramdisks that hold teh contents of your 'rw' > directories and are synced back to CF on shutdown? > You can do this via /etc/default/voyage-util > >> I need to move some directories from the system (/tmp and /var/run >> program I need to run) under sdc2 >> (in fact I had error when I start x with partition in read only) >> How to do that? > > If you want to mount a partition on boot, I suggest to do it via > /etc/fstab. If sdc2 is an ext2 filesystem there should be a line > /dev/sdc2 /mount/where/you/want ext2 defaults 0 0 > To write /etc/fstab you have to do remountrw and afterwards you better > do remountro again. > > But I really suggest you check /etc/default/voyage-util. This is the > benefit of using voyage over e.g. standard debian. > > Regards, > Adrian _______________________________________________ Voyage-linux mailing list [email protected] http://list.voyage.hk/mailman/listinfo/voyage-linux
