03-26-2019
URL is broken.
You had persistence before, did you not? The issue you had was that it was slow, but this is not unexpected -- USB is slow. Working around it meant putting everything in RAM and that, of course, is not persistent. Catch 22. Slow media does not have a go-faster button, you sped it up by not using it!
It may be possible to do something with unionfs overlays, booting from image but writing to disk, or mounting a read-write /home overtop of the imaged one, etc, etc. Not recommended unless you understand the boot process for your distribution extremely well.
Last edited by Corona688; 03-26-2019 at 06:04 PM..
This User Gave Thanks to Corona688 For This Post:
6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Red Hat
helo my sysem is running on redhat 9.
now i want to take data from redhat 9 pc to pen drive.
but when i plug it it is not detected.
can u tell me how to mount pendrive on redhat9.
amit (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: amitpansuria
1 Replies
2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Can anybody explane 'How to boot from a pendrive' ?Is it possible to load Operating System from a pendrive----? How? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ajith kumar.G
5 Replies
3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi all,
Can anybody help me with how I can connect a usb pendrive or external disk to a Sun Server which runs on Solaris 9? I am able to connect the usb drive to a windows server easily and copy files but am wondering if it is possible to do that with Solaris.
Any help will be appreciated. thanks. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rahmantanko
3 Replies
4. SCO
please let me know how to mount the pendrive on the unixware (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: deepthi.s
1 Replies
5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi Gurus,
in linux I am unable to access my pendrive(i am even not seeing the icon or location for my pendrive ).
Please anyany could help me to get rid of this issue.
regards,
Sanjay
:) (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: sanjay.login
4 Replies
6. Slackware
Holla,
I have been trying to install a recent distro, with a minimum X such as jwm, but unfortunately my cdrom is broken and I can only boot the USB port, with a pendrive.
AMD K6 3D is today too old for being for linux.
Is there an image of slackware than runs that processor and that can... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: raptor34
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
readdvd
readdvd(1) readdvd 1.0 readdvd(1)
NAME
readdvd - is creating an image of your source dvd media or medias even if it has / they have corrupted blocks
SYNOPSIS
readdvd [-l] [-h]
readdvd -d DEVICE1 [-d DEVICE2] [-d ...] -o file.iso [-s #] [-v] [-vv]
DESCRIPTION
readdvd reads even a corrupted dvd and writes the the result into a new image file on your harddisk.
DEVICE
can be an IDE, SCSI, SATA, USB or FireWire connected optical drive. Not all SATA controller support all Plextor features.
Linux:
/dev/hdX: IDE device
/dev/scdX: Linux 2.4: SATA, SCSI, USB device, or IDE device via ide-scsi emulation
/dev/srX: Linux 2.6: IDE device via new ATA layer, SCSI or USB device
OpenBSD/NetBSD:
/dev/rcdX
FreeBSD:
/dev/cd: SCSI device
/dev/acd: ATA device
MacOS X:
/dev/disk:
win32:
C:,D:,E:, ... X:,Y:,Z:
OPTIONS
-l scan busses for all available CD and DVD devices
-h help shows available options.
-o file.iso
write data to imagefile named file.iso
-s # read source media with selected speed
-v use verbose mode
-vv use extended verbose mode
INTERACTIVE MODUS
q stop reading media and exit
w save sector map which is currently read and continue with the next one
EXAMPLES
readdvd -d /dev/sr0 -o filename.iso -s 8 -v
create an image filename.bin of inserted media in device /dev/sr0 with read speed 8 in verbose mode.
please report man page improvements to T.Maguin@web.de
Gennady ShultZ Kozlov 10. April, 2009 readdvd(1)