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Full Discussion: Usb Boot
Operating Systems Linux Usb Boot Post 302340848 by Corona688 on Tuesday 4th of August 2009 12:26:04 PM
Old 08-04-2009
I've had no luck finding such a thing despite a great deal of looking, and it's easy to see why. The bandwidth for hosting CD images is bad enough, but disk images are just plain enormous, real hard to use, probably the wrong size for your drive, and all that -- who would bother? I had a long-running quest to make a generic USB disk boot image to fill this void until I realized that the computers at work I wanted to make boot drives for couldn't even boot from anything that's not a raw 1.44M floppy disk image. USB boot is a stupid pain.

So it comes down to borrowing a real computer and making your own, or perhaps buying a premade one when available. Sorry.
 

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SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-COMMIT.SERVICE(8)			 systemd-machine-id-commit.service		      SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-COMMIT.SERVICE(8)

NAME
systemd-machine-id-commit.service - Commit a transient machine ID to disk SYNOPSIS
systemd-machine-id-commit.service DESCRIPTION
systemd-machine-id-commit.service is an early boot service responsible for committing transient /etc/machine-id files to a writable disk file system. See machine-id(5) for more information about machine IDs. This service is started after local-fs.target in case /etc/machine-id is a mount point of its own (usually from a memory file system such as "tmpfs") and /etc is writable. The service will invoke systemd-machine-id-setup --commit, which writes the current transient machine ID to disk and unmount the /etc/machine-id file in a race-free manner to ensure that file is always valid and accessible for other processes. See systemd-machine-id-setup(1) for details. The main use case of this service are systems where /etc/machine-id is read-only and initially not initialized. In this case, the system manager will generate a transient machine ID file on a memory file system, and mount it over /etc/machine-id, during the early boot phase. This service is then invoked in a later boot phase, as soon as /etc has been remounted writable and the ID may thus be committed to disk to make it permanent. SEE ALSO
systemd(1), systemd-machine-id-setup(1), machine-id(5), systemd-firstboot(1) systemd 237 SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-COMMIT.SERVICE(8)
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