Did you run Knoppix from CD or DVD (as God intended), or did you "install" it? If it was run from an optical disc then it should not write to the disc.
<span style="background-color: #99FF99;">Hi,
I used knoppix to explore my centos 5.5 GUI, but knoppix modified my root name.
Before running it, my root name in the terminal was 'root@mepouze'
Now it is 'root@knoppix ~ mepouze'
So I tried to find how to modify this value it on the internet, but i did not find any topic about it.
I re-installed Centos 5.5 GUI hoping that it will erase the value written, but it has not changed anything about it.
Thanks for your answers.</span>
Did you run Knoppix from CD or DVD (as God intended), or did you "install" it? If it was run from an optical disc then it should not write to the disc.
---
Verifying of md5 checksum and burning a CD at slow speed are important.
yes i used the dvd of knoppix
What I forgot to precise is that I used the version 5.1.1 of knoppix CD, not dvd.
So now, i'm thinking about many things : maybe the 5.1.1 CD Boot is too old and presents uncompatiblities with the news OSes like centos 5.5 GUI.
Maybe I will have to format my disk in fat32 in order to clean it totally.
I need some help to conclue =p
If you're seeing root@knoppix, it's probably because you're booted into Knoppix, not centos. There should be no changes to the hard drive - it's just the way knoppix identifies itself.
Cheers!
Krishna
It's impossible to boot on it because my priority device is hard drive first.
I've disabled cd priority.
This problem is inside Centos wich has been, according to me, modified somewhere by knoppix.
Knoppix will use a Linux swap file if one is available on the hard disk. Beyond that it should not write to the hard disk at all unless instructed to, and even then there are several safeguards that make writing (accidentally or deliberately) hard for a beginner. Ive seen a few other cases where someone claimed that Knoppix mucked something up on its own, but have never seen a confirmed case of it.
I assume it was possible to boot Knoppix at one point, otherwise you likely would not claim that Knoppix made a change. And it would be "possible" again, just by the flipping the BIOS setting again. Why disable CD booting (or CD priority as you call it) when you could prevent booting a disc just by removing it from the drive?
---
Verifying of md5 checksum and burning a CD at slow speed are important.
The knoppix in the string is the so-called "machine name". This may be changed by editing the /etc/hosts file. However, there may be other places that centos puts the machine name, too. Essentially, your problem won't affect much of anything in most cases, but if you want to poke around in the administrative utilities included with that distro, you can make it say what you want.
Cheers!
Krishna
Juniper Networks EX3300 EX3300-48P 48-Port Gigabit PoE+ Switch
$37.02
Juniper EX3300-48P, 48 Port PoE+ Gigabit Network Switch with RACK EARS, RESET
$46.99
Juniper EX3300-48P 48-Port 10/100/1000BASE-T (48 PoE+ ports) with 4 SFP+
$74.00
JUNIPER EX3400-48P 48x 1GB PoE+ RJ-45 4x 10GB SFP+ 2x 40GB QSFP+, DUAL AC POWER
$168.00
Juniper MX150 / New /1 Year Warranty / SHIPS TODAY
$1250.00
Juniper EX2200-C-12P-2G 12-Port 10/100/1000BASE-T PoE+ Compact Switch
$100.00
Juniper EX4200-48PX 48-PORT 10/100/1000BASET PoE Ethernet Switch
$38.87
Juniper EX3400-48P 48-Ports PoE+ 4x SFP+ and 2x QSFP+ Managed Switch Tested
$140.00
Juniper Networks EX3300 EX3300-48P PoE+ 48-Port 4x SFP Gigabyte Ethernet Switch
$59.99
Juniper Networks SRX220 8-Port Gigabit Services Gateway Security Appliance
$45.00