Results 1 to 10 of 29

Thread: Re-master your flash installation

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Posts
    123
    I created an account just for this tutorial.
    I tried your method of remastering as I like the way it works.
    But did however made the mistake of trying to do the source/master directory on a ntfs filesystem. this caused all persmissions to be lost while copying and after the remaster nearly everything was broken.
    Of course I was going to rage on this tutorial when I realized it maybe couldve been because it was ntfs and took another memorystick and formatted it to an ext2 filesystem. this did the job

    is there a way to not break anything while still copying to a ntfs filesystem?

  2. #2
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Posts
    242
    dinosoep wonders ...

    is there a way to not break anything while still copying to a ntfs filesystem?
    Well, yes there is. Have you noticed how Knoppix uses (compressed) loop devices a lot ? You can think of these as filesystems-in-a-file instead of filesystems-on-a-partition. You can use the same trick to create an Linux file system on an ntfs partition.

    There are four steps:

    1. Mount your ntfs partition under Knoppix (if not already mounted). That will probably be something like:

    Code:
    mount /media/sda1
    2. Create a large file on it. How big depends but for remastering the Knoppix CD let's guess 4 Gb is enough. You need something like:

    Code:
    dd bs=4K count=1M if=/dev/zero of=/media/sda1/big.one
    3. Create a file system in the big file:

    Code:
    mkfs -t ext3 -F /media/sda1/temp/big.one
    4. Mount the file as a loop back device:

    Code:
    mount -o loop /media/sda1/temp/big.one /lots_of_free_space
    You may need to sudo one or more of the commands and, of course, adapt the parameters to your particular situation. The mkfs command takes many parameters and some may be more useful in this situation than others.

  3. #3
    Administrator Site Admin-
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    5,441
    Quote Originally Posted by Forester View Post
    Well, yes there is. Have you noticed how Knoppix uses (compressed) loop devices a lot ? You can think of these as filesystems-in-a-file instead of filesystems-on-a-partition....
    As a moderator, I passed the above post, as it is not spam and on topic.

    However, as a user and someone who has been on this site for nearly 8 years and seen over and over again the reports of disaster after writing to NTFS, I couldn't just pass it and not warn others that it is not a universal opinion. Yea, you can create a file system within another file system under Linux. But to do so you still need to write to the physical file system. Not just to create it but during all of the writing processes. I know of no reason to think that this is safer than just writing to NTFS (which is unfortunately still not safe).

    If you want another file system on your hard disk consider shrinking the main partition, or use that "back up" partition that the vendor wasted disk space to create (after making a backup disc), and create a second Linux or FAT partition there, or even just add another inexpensive hard disk. An extra partition can be a Linux partition or a FAT partition (A FAT partition will be subjected to the 4GB-1 file size but lets you transfer files easily between Windows and Linux). But if you write to a NTFS partition, have very good backups of everything and keep making backups, the effects of corruption are often not noticed for some time after the damage is done.
    ---
    Verifying of md5 checksum and burning a CD at slow speed are important.

  4. #4
    Senior Member registered user
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Posts
    423
    Quote Originally Posted by Harry Kuhman View Post
    However, as a user and someone who has been on this site for nearly 8 years and seen over and over again the reports of disaster after writing to NTFS, I couldn't just pass it and not warn others that it is not a universal opinion. Yea, you can create a file system within another file system under Linux. But to do so you still need to write to the physical file system. Not just to create it but during all of the writing processes. I know of no reason to think that this is safer than just writing to NTFS (which is unfortunately still not safe).
    This subject has been mentioned quite many times. 8 years of observation is quite a long time, especially in the world of IT. I am not sure how extensive your observation is substantiated with facts, as software version changes, some bad experience in the past with bugged software may not be applicable to newer versions of software.

    The fact is over the recent years, the use of NTFS (for read and write access ) in Linux has got wide spread usage and penetration. If you look at embedded devices, quite many of them are Linux based, they read/write usb flashes and SATA harddisk. I came to know quite many of the media players are Linux based. I also know that Samsung TV is Linux-based too. These devices read/write on NTFS file system (and FAT32) !

    I cannot help but to think that read/write of NTFS on Linux has gotten to a usable degree of safety - if one does not use those fancy features of NTFS. But if indeed your observation - substantiated with facts - does indicate that NTFS writing is still unsafe, perhaps it is a problem unique to Knoppix ? I am wondering ......

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  


Fanxiang 4TB 2TB 1TB SSD 550MB/s 2.5'' SATA III Internal Solid State Drive lot picture

Fanxiang 4TB 2TB 1TB SSD 550MB/s 2.5'' SATA III Internal Solid State Drive lot

$188.99



Netac 2TB 1TB 512GB 240GB Internal SSD 2.5'' SATAIII 6Gb/s Solid State Drive lot picture

Netac 2TB 1TB 512GB 240GB Internal SSD 2.5'' SATAIII 6Gb/s Solid State Drive lot

$118.99



Fanxiang M.2 SATA SSD 2TB 1TB 512GB 256GB SSD Internal M2 Solid State Drive Lot picture

Fanxiang M.2 SATA SSD 2TB 1TB 512GB 256GB SSD Internal M2 Solid State Drive Lot

$109.99



Netac 1TB 2TB 512GB Internal SSD 2.5'' SATA III 6Gb/s Solid State Drive lot picture

Netac 1TB 2TB 512GB Internal SSD 2.5'' SATA III 6Gb/s Solid State Drive lot

$119.99



Patriot P210 128GB 256GB 512GB 1TB 2TB 2.5

Patriot P210 128GB 256GB 512GB 1TB 2TB 2.5" SATA 3 6GB/s Internal SSD PC/MAC Lot

$13.99



Crucial M500 480GB SED MLC 2.5

Crucial M500 480GB SED MLC 2.5" 6Gbps SATA Drive CT480M500SSD1 - PRICE PER UNIT

$24.99



Genuine Samsung 850 EVO MZ-75E250 250GB 2.5

Genuine Samsung 850 EVO MZ-75E250 250GB 2.5" SATA III SSD Solid State Drive

$20.00



Fanxiang 256GB SSD 2.5'' SATA SSD III 6Gb/s 530MBs Internal Solid State Drive PC picture

Fanxiang 256GB SSD 2.5'' SATA SSD III 6Gb/s 530MBs Internal Solid State Drive PC

$19.99



4 TB SSD SATA III Drive 2.5

4 TB SSD SATA III Drive 2.5" Solid State Drive SATAIII 6Gb/s UP to 540MB/s

$148.00



512GB 1TB 2tb 4tb 256g M.2 2280 SSD SATA3 Internal Solid State Drive Lot Dogfish picture

512GB 1TB 2tb 4tb 256g M.2 2280 SSD SATA3 Internal Solid State Drive Lot Dogfish

$271.99