The trick is to make the HDD copy bootable from HDD. Also, I'm fairly (not 100%) certain that Knoppix comes with a script or application that allows for copying of the CD image to HDD.
Well, you are only half right here, of course, the RAM in a computer is always faster than the hard discs, but if you copy the whole CD image to RAM, you have left only a certain amount of RAM for the applications to use, but if you copy the whole CD image to HDD, you have as much free RAM, as if you would boot from a CD, but you have don't have to have the CD present the whole time, so it's kind of "best of both worlds" (as much free RAM as if booting from CD, while having one more free CD drive).Originally Posted by Harry Kuhman
The trick is to make the HDD copy bootable from HDD. Also, I'm fairly (not 100%) certain that Knoppix comes with a script or application that allows for copying of the CD image to HDD.
Another very nice Live CD that I just came across is Backtrack 2, available here. The focus is on security, but it still contains a fair assortment of the typical tools. And Knoppix could learn a lot from this Live CD, wireless networking seems to work great, even on computers that Knoppix doesn't begin to try to support.
---
Verifying of md5 checksum and burning a CD at slow speed are important.
Nice to see old postings however I regularly use Knoppix , SLAX and Puppy, and on this year 2010 they are still as functional as ever.
Unfortunately, they are mostly also as unfunctional as previously. For example, Puppy Linux still can't mount a DVD-RAM disk. I'm not sure about Knoppix, because I've never had enough memory to load it into RAM and/or a second burner. I did try loading Knoppix 6.2.1 LiveDVD into memory on a system that has 4GB, and it wouldn't go....
Slax, OTOH, will load into memory on a 1GB system, freeing up the burner. And it will also read and write to DVD-RAM disks formatted UDF 1.5 (NOT 2.01, the default) in Windows 7.
I wish I could find a Linux LiveCD distro that uses the current kernel AND supports DVD-RAM and UDF.
Have you tried it on a USB-flash drive? I got an 8GB super-fast, super-tiny Verbatim drive on Amazon for <$30, delivered. The speed is acceptable and I have plenty of room for the persistent file (using 2GB.) Since I have BIOS trouble, I still boot off the DVD, but I can switch over to the flash and free up the burner to make DVDs, or transfer data to/from backups.
Good luck!Slax, OTOH, will load into memory on a 1GB system, freeing up the burner. And it will also read and write to DVD-RAM disks formatted UDF 1.5 (NOT 2.01, the default) in Windows 7.
I wish I could find a Linux LiveCD distro that uses the current kernel AND supports DVD-RAM and UDF.
Krishna
If I do mind the boot from CD... then I must be able to copy the Knoppix ISO to a disk partition and boot it with Grub2 which will boot an ISO directly. I have used the 'tohd / fromhd' method in the past and its bullet proof, but it seems, today, that the Grub2 ISO boot would be nice. Any idea what kind of menu entry I would need to add to the Grub2 "40_custom" script to get it to work...?
Here's what I've tried but it gets stuck looking for a USB device
Any ideas (or pointers about where to look) would be great! Thanks...Code:menuentry "Knoppix 2 ADRIANE V6.2.1 ISO (on /dev/sda1)" { insmod ext2 set root=(hd0,1) loopback loop (hd0,1)/Downloads_BACKUP/adriane-knoppix.iso linux (loop)/boot/isolinux/linux iso_filename=/Downloads_BACKUP/adriane-knoppix.iso ramdisk_size=100000 lang=en vt.default_utf8=0 apm=power-off vga=788 xmodule=fbdev initrd=minirt.gz nomce quiet loglevel=0 tz=localtime echo 'Loading initial ramdisk ...' initrd (loop)/boot/isolinux/minirt.gz }
Does it work when it's booted from CD, without the encapsulation of the ISO format? Another option is to create a partition 1 you can then do your Knoppix "install" on - just use the flash-install script. It will set up booting from that as well as doing all the copying, etc. That script requires the use of partition 1, so you'd have to "move the existing partition 1" to another one of the slots with a partition table editor.
Cheers!
Krishna
Last edited by krishna.murphy; 08-26-2010 at 05:40 PM. Reason: clarity
Hi Krishna,
Thanks for the reply. I will take a look at this and get back to you...
Cheers,
Coady
HP ProLiant DL380 Gen9 8SFF Server - E5-2698 v3 - 32Cores - 128GB Ram - 1TB HDD
$299.00
Dell Poweredge R620 2x E5-2680 2.7ghz 16-Cores / 128gb / H710 / 2x Trays / 750w
$199.99
Dell R730xd 26 Port SFF 2x E5-2697v4 36-Cores H730 128GB Server 2x SFP 10G ENT
$490.00
HP ProLiant DL380 Gen9 Server 1x Xeon E5-2620V3 2.40 GHz 32 GB RAM No OS No HDD
$129.95
Dell PowerEdge R720 Dual Intel Xeon E5-2643 @3.30GHz 128GB RAM No HDD H710P
$124.50
Dell PowerEdge R730XD 28 Core Server 2X Xeon E5-2680 V4 H730 32GB RAM No HDD
$289.99
SuperMicro Server 505-2 Intel Atom 2.4GHz 8GB RAM SYS-5018A-FTN4 1U Rackmount
$202.49
Dell R630 Server 2x E5-2620 V4 2.1GHz =16 Cores 128GB DDR4 1x 960GB 2x 1G 2x 10G
$345.00
DELL PowerEdge R730 Server 2x E5-2697v4 2.3GHz =36 Cores 128GB H730 4xRJ45
$478.00
Lenovo SR530 Server (Intel Xeon Silver 4110) (3x 800GB SSD) (NO OS) (48GB RAM)
$599.00