Install Puppy Linux From Usb To Hard Drive

  четверг 27 декабря
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How NOT to install Puppy Linux Impatient? Jump to Or Puppy is easy to use and does not require a hard disk, so the first trick that you must know is how NOT to install it to hard disk! • BOOT FROM CD/DVD - Just boot using the CD/DVD and save to USB flash (you will be asked at shutdown to save or not). If you choose 'Save', Puppy will create your save file and use this next time you boot so that you can continue with your previous work.

Jun 17, 2018 - I just start with a blank drive and let Puppy or another distro install to it. You MUST use a 64 bit version of Linux for such a computer. I got the xenailpup 7.5 32 bits on my usb drive ran it down able to performe a full install. HomePage > Components and HowTos > Install How to Create a Full Installation on an Internal Hard Disk Drive (H.D.D.) Ensure that the target installation partition has ≥350MB free space available; Create a LiveDVD or LiveUSB.

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The save file will be named pup_save.2fs (you can add a SPECIALNAME during the first save to make it pup_save-SPECIALNAME.2fs). You may also be asked if the programs sfs (like pup_421.sfs or pup-431.sfs) will be copied to your disk drive to speed up booting - Puppy will ask you about this (it is an option to speed up booting when Puppy has detected a hard disk). Note that some puplets use a different name for its programs sfs. Final note in using CD/DVD: you can also save to the same CD/DVD that you booted from (Here, DVD works better, but the DVD containing Puppy must be burned initially as 'not final', i.e., that more files can be added to it; advanced CD burning software can do this in Windows, and Puppy has BurnISO2cd for this). • BOOT FROM USB - While booted from CD or DVD, install Puppy to USB and use it for booting (see Setup in the menu for the installer).

You can then tell Puppy at shutdown to save to the same USB drive, or to your hard disk. A good tutorial for USB install of Puppy Linux 4.30 is made available as PDF (, also and ). Note that USB drives will be named /mnt/sdb or /mnt/sdc in newer Puppy versions, but /mnt/sda in older ones. Now, did you notice that the newer Puppy will have a hard disk named /mnt/sda? Therefore, BE CAREFUL - you must know whether WHAT YOU THINK TO BE USB IS NOT YOUR HARD DISK!!! You should know exactly that what you are targetting for USB install is not your hard disk.

Look at the drive icons in your desktop: a USB icon will be associated with your USB drive. Still, you may be saying, ' But am too old-fashioned - I only know that an OS has to be booted from hard disk!' Well, if you really have to make an install to hard disk, use a two-minute install called or use the familiar. Frugal Install to Hard Disk A frugal install works this way: First, a boot directory will have to be created in your chosen partition. • If you are booting Windows XP, create boot folder in the Windows partition, then get and copy its contents to boot.

• If you are booting Linux only, then run Grub config from the Puppy menu to choose your bootable partition (that partition must be Linux!). Grub will create the boot directory.

NOTE: Do not run Grub config if you already have another Linux running in your hard disk - just change its menu.lst (see further down below how do do this). This is how the boot directory will appear in the Windows XP partition (as viewed by Linux). But before using this install, you have to boot Windows XP, open boot and click on grubinstall.exe to run it.

CAUTION: If your Windows XP needs a disk check, do that first before clicking grubinstall.exe. This is how boot/grub directory will appear in Linux (the folder grub only appears in Linux, so it will not show in the Windows install). Note that menu.lst is common to both installs. What it does is to point to psubdir, the folder that contains the Linux files. In the file menu.lst, you put this folder name before vmlinuz and initrd.gz.

In the example below, the name of psubdir is boxpup. You can have more than one psubdir folder, and each can contain the files of a different Puppy version or puplet. To use this additional version or puplet, you create another entry in menu.lst similar to the given example (boxpup).

The codes hd0,0 means 'first hard disk' and 'first partition' (counting from 0, that is - remember this numbering if you are using a different location for your install). The contents of the folder boxpup are actually files copied from the CD, see below (These files can also be copied from the Puppy ISO while in Windows by using a file compressor program like WinRAR or an ISO editor program like MagicISO). Note that all file names must be in lowercase!

Observe from the picture above that boxpup (a Puppy Linux puplet) is using pup_413.sfs for its programs sfs, and the user has named his pup_save.2fs as pup_save-boxpup.2fs (Puppy does the naming of the pup_save for you during the first save). The two other files needed by every Puppy version are vmlinuz (the kernel) and initrd.gz (the initialization image). You see now that both Linux and WindowsXP frugal installs use a psubdir folder as container of the Puppy files. The additional requirement in Linux install is the boot partition where the folder /boot is needed by Grub - this partition should be a Linux partition. If you have no idea how to create a Linux partition, then just stick to the use of WindowsXP partition.