Why not read- and writable? I suppose you are using a "poor man's install.
First I boot knoppix as:
then I seeknoppix64 init 2 no3d fromhd="/dev/sdc5"
$ mount | grep mnt-system
/dev/sdc5 on /mnt-system type ext4 (rw,relatime,block_validity,delalloc,barrier,user_ xattr,acl)
$ blkid | grep sdc5
/dev/sdc5: LABEL="KNPX771" UUID="54e317fe-73cf-4b1c-8b1f-dfc9b708b68a" TYPE="ext2" PARTUUID="591ef660-03"
Why not read- and writable? I suppose you are using a "poor man's install.
OK, I (most probably wrongly) thought that partition used for a "poor man's install" would be read-only anyway
Say, you would like to define the regular user directory on the starting command prompt and you don't want anything to be ever written there
In fact, you would run knoppix without a hard drive at all and set up a user account after it started in case you would like to save anything. I would say a few files (access control + security) would be altered, just a few ... but the rest should be read-only
How do you do that?
Last edited by Albretch; 12-19-2016 at 08:03 PM.
In this case I wouldn't use a Live Linux as Knoppix with all his limitations. I would prefer for example Debian.
***NEW*** BCM RX67Q Gaming Motherboard | Intel Q67 2nd/3rd Gen. | LGA1155 | DDR3
$29.77
ASUS H110M-R Motherboard Intel 6th/7th Gen LGA1151 DDR4 Micro-ATX i/o shield
$42.00
Gigabyte Z370P D3 ATX Z370 LGA1151 Motherboard (Support Intel 6/7th 8th 9th)
$59.99
ASUS Prime Q270M-C LGA1151 DP HDMI VGA SATA 6GB/s USB 3.0 MicroATX Motherboard
$37.99
ASUS Prime Z390-A LGA 1151 Intel Z390 SATA USB 3.1 ATX Motherboard NO I/O
$99.00
Asus H81M-C Intel LGA1150 DDR3 Desktop Motherboard MicroATX Socket H3; Works
$29.99
Asrock Z390 Phantom Gaming 4S/AC Wifi 8th/9th Gen Intel 1151 Motherboard Bulk
$47.41
Gigabyte GA-B75M-HD3 Intel LGA1155 DDR3 Desktop Motherboard MicroATX USB 3.0
$26.99
ASUS Prime B560m-a LGA 1200 Intel B560 SATA 6gb/s Micro ATX Intel Motherboard
$34.19
ASUS ROG Strix Z370-H Gaming Intel Motherboard Z370 - DDR4 with i7 8700 CPU
$225.00