Fluppy 013
Greetings,
Thanks for a great disto (fluppy 10). I don't have a netbook but it runs better than any puppy I've tried so far. Currently using it on a Toshiba Satellite L305. Thing that got me to testing Fluppy is the fact that it had bluetooth and I like using my bt mouse. At this point I have loaded the OpenOffice.sfs, the Google Chrome Stable.deb off of their site (I had to copy a link to the desktop from /opt/google/chrome, Kompozer, Nero Linux 4, medibuntu, gpfind, firefox (pet). My Motorola Quantico tethers just fine using the PupDial and of course I preload the modprobe usbserial instructions for internet. Still trying to get DVD95Converter to run (library problem). And I haven't tried bluetooth dialup with my phone yet. Will keep you posted. O' yes I'm booting puppy from my Ubuntu Maverick ext4 partition. Puppy is the first linux system I was able to get working until I found Ubuntu over a year ago. Ubuntu let me get weaned from M$. I've been 100% Linux for over a year. My wife is all Linux except for Quicken running in wine. Anyway its nice to have a really great Puppy to work with. If I can get all of my apps going I may just switch full time.
Thanks
tlcstat
Thanks for a great disto (fluppy 10). I don't have a netbook but it runs better than any puppy I've tried so far. Currently using it on a Toshiba Satellite L305. Thing that got me to testing Fluppy is the fact that it had bluetooth and I like using my bt mouse. At this point I have loaded the OpenOffice.sfs, the Google Chrome Stable.deb off of their site (I had to copy a link to the desktop from /opt/google/chrome, Kompozer, Nero Linux 4, medibuntu, gpfind, firefox (pet). My Motorola Quantico tethers just fine using the PupDial and of course I preload the modprobe usbserial instructions for internet. Still trying to get DVD95Converter to run (library problem). And I haven't tried bluetooth dialup with my phone yet. Will keep you posted. O' yes I'm booting puppy from my Ubuntu Maverick ext4 partition. Puppy is the first linux system I was able to get working until I found Ubuntu over a year ago. Ubuntu let me get weaned from M$. I've been 100% Linux for over a year. My wife is all Linux except for Quicken running in wine. Anyway its nice to have a really great Puppy to work with. If I can get all of my apps going I may just switch full time.
Thanks
tlcstat
This is the second occasion that I have received a suggestion to use a MS app to solve a problem in Linux - and it irks me.James C wrote: Don't know if this applies to your version of Windows 7 but.......
I run Windows 7 Ultimate and it has a built in disc partitioner to shrink the Windows partition.
.
Gparted (or perhaps it was a different Linux partition app) has *always* worked fine in Puppy - when was it broken and why?
I have always been able to view and manipulate MS partitions, create an ext3 partition, and load Puppy.
NTFS is slower and less reliable than ext3 so I have no desire to stuff a Frugal install in with MS junk and have them co-exist.
All of the computers here are Linux - it is rare to ever use MS for anything - and never online.
I'd like to minimize MS7 as much as possible, stripping out wasted space, then have it available in GRUB.
This never used to be hard in Puppy and never involved any app from MS ...
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
I just read this:
http://puppylinux.org/wikka/UsingPuppy/ ... 6+01:52:10
I really like the strategy of sinple and separate - NTFS for MS and ext3 for Linux. And, therefore, different logical disks as well.
Really easy to see what is doing what.
http://puppylinux.org/wikka/UsingPuppy/ ... 6+01:52:10
Is what "can" be done in Frugal what is *best* to do in Frugal?One can place a frugal install within a pre-existing Win98 installation; the save file (although it itself contains an ext2 file system) may reside on a FAT32 or NTFS partition. Which is why a frugal install is also called a "co-exist" install. Not so with a full hard disk drive install: one cannot make a full installation on a FAT partition because it does not support Linux symbolic links.
I really like the strategy of sinple and separate - NTFS for MS and ext3 for Linux. And, therefore, different logical disks as well.
Really easy to see what is doing what.
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
Is cfdisk unable to handle a ntfs partition?
gparted is not behaving and pdisk is apparently not in Fluppy, and I don't recall if it could handle ntfs either (I think it's just a shell for cfdisk and fdisk)..
gparted is not behaving and pdisk is apparently not in Fluppy, and I don't recall if it could handle ntfs either (I think it's just a shell for cfdisk and fdisk)..
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
How did you create the third partition?nooby wrote:You only need a new partition for Fluppy if you have to do Full install.
I use Fluppy on a netbook with three partitions that the manufactor Acer out there all in NTFS and the Sda3 or (hd0,2) is the one I use for many frugal installs.
I made use of Shinobar's describtion on how to use grub4dosconfig to get a dual boot going.
I cannot get gparted to show the two NTFS MS partitions so I cannot move things around.
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
ended up for now with scripts from archlinux wiki
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Samsung_N150
fn keys are still not seen,but i use alt and arrows instead in xbinkeys
noticed that parole plugin starts but can not play anything
tried beryl sfs (from nov 17) just for fun
surprisingly it works (the wm) but cairo-dock crashes
played a bit with my daughter with cube
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Samsung_N150
fn keys are still not seen,but i use alt and arrows instead in xbinkeys
noticed that parole plugin starts but can not play anything
tried beryl sfs (from nov 17) just for fun
surprisingly it works (the wm) but cairo-dock crashes
played a bit with my daughter with cube
New Microsoft Primary Partitions
edoc,
When you buy a computer with a factory install single Microsoft partition on its disk the Microsoft operating system owns the disk (unless there is a tiny vendor's maintenance partition). The Microsoft operating system puts files in the first tracks and in the last tracks. It marks both to stake its territory.
If you do not want the Microsoft operating system at all, start gparted and re-format the whole disk.
If you want the Microsoft partition, but smaller, start Microsoft as Administrator and use Microsoft's shrinking tool. Instructions are in the MS help files.
If you want your Microsoft partition still smaller, shrink, then re-install the Microsoft operating system using the recovery disks, then shrink using the Micorsoft tool again. You can do this a couple of times, causing Microsof to eliminate space it reserves for file recovery.
With Microsoft shrunk, shut down, start with Linux, start gparted, or other, and do what you want with the free space.
Microsoft does not want non-Microsoft programs moving things in its OS partition, so it prevents them being able to. Microsoft does not want people to blow MS completely off their computers for not being able to shrink it, so they made their own tool. They compromised. Their tool is proprietary and MS-specific, and works great with MS. With it there is no need for Linux partitioner developers to waste time hacking MS to figure out how to set and unset MS space-markers.
When you buy a computer with a factory install single Microsoft partition on its disk the Microsoft operating system owns the disk (unless there is a tiny vendor's maintenance partition). The Microsoft operating system puts files in the first tracks and in the last tracks. It marks both to stake its territory.
If you do not want the Microsoft operating system at all, start gparted and re-format the whole disk.
If you want the Microsoft partition, but smaller, start Microsoft as Administrator and use Microsoft's shrinking tool. Instructions are in the MS help files.
If you want your Microsoft partition still smaller, shrink, then re-install the Microsoft operating system using the recovery disks, then shrink using the Micorsoft tool again. You can do this a couple of times, causing Microsof to eliminate space it reserves for file recovery.
With Microsoft shrunk, shut down, start with Linux, start gparted, or other, and do what you want with the free space.
Microsoft does not want non-Microsoft programs moving things in its OS partition, so it prevents them being able to. Microsoft does not want people to blow MS completely off their computers for not being able to shrink it, so they made their own tool. They compromised. Their tool is proprietary and MS-specific, and works great with MS. With it there is no need for Linux partitioner developers to waste time hacking MS to figure out how to set and unset MS space-markers.
- maxpro4u
- Posts: 293
- Joined: Sat 19 Jun 2010, 18:20
- Location: Rittman,Ohio,USA, In dog years,I'm dead
- Contact:
Try changing the keyboard using the wizard. What happened when you used bindkeys in the control panel?magerlab wrote:ended up for now with scripts from archlinux wiki
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Samsung_N150
fn keys are still not seen,but i use alt and arrows instead in xbinkeys
Dell D610 1.7M w/1024mb
Testing Slacko and a few others
I'm Max Wachtel and I approve this message.
Registered Linux User #393236
Testing Slacko and a few others
I'm Max Wachtel and I approve this message.
Registered Linux User #393236
Thanks CLAM01!
I had never run into that with a MS install before - it is good info.
Shame on MS for being so monopolistic - and for hardware vendors selling-out to them - so much for user-choice. Sigh.
I will get about the business of relegating the MS-install to it's rightful corner and dunce cap ... if WINE were less of a nuisance I'd wipe the MS install entirely.
I had never run into that with a MS install before - it is good info.
Shame on MS for being so monopolistic - and for hardware vendors selling-out to them - so much for user-choice. Sigh.
I will get about the business of relegating the MS-install to it's rightful corner and dunce cap ... if WINE were less of a nuisance I'd wipe the MS install entirely.
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
edoc,
My netbook also comes with Windows 7 Starter - I wish I could buy a blank netbook or with Linux, so I don't have to pay the MS tax, but they don't have it here ...
I didn't get the chance to try Fluppy's gparted to resize MS partition on my netbook because Fluppy crashed before it even booted (I managed to fix this later as discussed in earlier pages of this thread).
I think Fluppy's gparted failure to detect your MS partition is because it is rather old (based on puppy 4.3.1). For my case, I used Fatdog64's gparted instead. It works to resize the NTFS partition - you don't need to do it from Windows. If your machine is not 64-bit capable, you can try gparted from any other newer puppies also.
For me, I had 3 partition there: the "recovery partition", the "boot" partition, and the "OS partition". Don't touch the first two. You will know the OS partition because it's the largest one (and usually the last one).
What you need to do is:
a) boot to Windows and do the necessary setup first (don't connect to Internet if you don't want to). Let the process run into finish, and watch in amusement how many re-boots are required to setup a supposedly pre-installed operating system ... but avoid the temptation to cut short the process. Why do this? This to ensure that Windows is properly installed, that it has decompressed any system files it needs, so that it has taken the harddisk space that it requires to run. If you're adventurous, you can try to trim it and uninstall the bloatware craps that usually come pre-installed, otherwise leave it there - you won't bother with it anymore anyway.
b) The boot the puppy OS, run gparted, and resize the OS partition to a reasonable size (ie, a couple of GBs over the currently used space).
c) Create an extended partition which covers the entire free space freed by b) above. The benefit of doing this rather than going straight to d) is that later on, you can split the partition into two or more partitions if you wish. If you don't create an extended partition, you can't split it because the maximum number of partition (4) has been reached. (Remember the partitioning scheme is still based on the same scheme devised 30 years ago for 10 MB harddisk ...)
d) Create an ext3 (or ext2 or ext4 or any other partition as you wish) in this extended partition.
e) Install Fluppy
f) Optional - you can access the ext2/3/4 you created in d) from Windows if you want to. Here's how: Boot to Windows, and install the ext2 filesystem driver here:
Main code - install this first http://www.ext2fsd.com/?p=19
Patches from Bo Branten here http://branten.se/nt/. With this, sharing data from puppy / Windows is a snap. That's also the reason you shouldn't allocate too much extra space for Windows in step b).
HTH, cheers!
My netbook also comes with Windows 7 Starter - I wish I could buy a blank netbook or with Linux, so I don't have to pay the MS tax, but they don't have it here ...
I didn't get the chance to try Fluppy's gparted to resize MS partition on my netbook because Fluppy crashed before it even booted (I managed to fix this later as discussed in earlier pages of this thread).
I think Fluppy's gparted failure to detect your MS partition is because it is rather old (based on puppy 4.3.1). For my case, I used Fatdog64's gparted instead. It works to resize the NTFS partition - you don't need to do it from Windows. If your machine is not 64-bit capable, you can try gparted from any other newer puppies also.
For me, I had 3 partition there: the "recovery partition", the "boot" partition, and the "OS partition". Don't touch the first two. You will know the OS partition because it's the largest one (and usually the last one).
What you need to do is:
a) boot to Windows and do the necessary setup first (don't connect to Internet if you don't want to). Let the process run into finish, and watch in amusement how many re-boots are required to setup a supposedly pre-installed operating system ... but avoid the temptation to cut short the process. Why do this? This to ensure that Windows is properly installed, that it has decompressed any system files it needs, so that it has taken the harddisk space that it requires to run. If you're adventurous, you can try to trim it and uninstall the bloatware craps that usually come pre-installed, otherwise leave it there - you won't bother with it anymore anyway.
b) The boot the puppy OS, run gparted, and resize the OS partition to a reasonable size (ie, a couple of GBs over the currently used space).
c) Create an extended partition which covers the entire free space freed by b) above. The benefit of doing this rather than going straight to d) is that later on, you can split the partition into two or more partitions if you wish. If you don't create an extended partition, you can't split it because the maximum number of partition (4) has been reached. (Remember the partitioning scheme is still based on the same scheme devised 30 years ago for 10 MB harddisk ...)
d) Create an ext3 (or ext2 or ext4 or any other partition as you wish) in this extended partition.
e) Install Fluppy
f) Optional - you can access the ext2/3/4 you created in d) from Windows if you want to. Here's how: Boot to Windows, and install the ext2 filesystem driver here:
Main code - install this first http://www.ext2fsd.com/?p=19
Patches from Bo Branten here http://branten.se/nt/. With this, sharing data from puppy / Windows is a snap. That's also the reason you shouldn't allocate too much extra space for Windows in step b).
HTH, cheers!
Fatdog64 forum links: [url=http://murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=117546]Latest version[/url] | [url=https://cutt.ly/ke8sn5H]Contributed packages[/url] | [url=https://cutt.ly/se8scrb]ISO builder[/url]
Are you booting Fatdog64 on your netbook or are you saying that the Fatdog64 gparted will work in Fluppy?
This is a used MSI so the MS install was already there.
I only see two partitions on the desktop. 100MB (Syetem Reserved) and 149GB (everything else).
This is a used MSI so the MS install was already there.
I only see two partitions on the desktop. 100MB (Syetem Reserved) and 149GB (everything else).
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
I'm booting Fatdog64 in my netbook (Atom N450 is 64bit-capable). When I said "use gparted from other puppies" - what I mean is to boot those other puppies and use the gparted available there. Not direct copying of their gparteds to Fluppy.edoc wrote:Are you booting Fatdog64 on your netbook or are you saying that the Fatdog64 gparted will work in Fluppy?
It's ok, that means you don't have the "online recovery partition". This "recovery" partition usually only exist if the laptop maker doesn't ship recovery CD (to save costs). If that's the case you can skip the step c) (creation of extended partition) if you wish, because you still have 1 more slot for additional partition later.This is a used MSI so the MS install was already there.
I only see two partitions on the desktop. 100MB (Syetem Reserved) and 149GB (everything else).
Fatdog64 forum links: [url=http://murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=117546]Latest version[/url] | [url=https://cutt.ly/ke8sn5H]Contributed packages[/url] | [url=https://cutt.ly/se8scrb]ISO builder[/url]
FINALLY!!!!!!!
I have tracked down what was causing fluppy to temporarily freeze (and other recent puppies too) on my Toshiba nb200.
Well, I don't really know. But I do know how to fix it! You have to disable the tickless feature of the kernel. This apparently could increase power usage and temperatures a little. But it is a price that I will have to pay for now, I guess.
In your bootloader (e.g. grub or grub4dos) add the following kernel option:
Also this option is recommended to improve power saving:
My grub4dos entry looks like this now:
Got this info from http://www.linlap.com/wiki/toshiba+nb200
I have tracked down what was causing fluppy to temporarily freeze (and other recent puppies too) on my Toshiba nb200.
Well, I don't really know. But I do know how to fix it! You have to disable the tickless feature of the kernel. This apparently could increase power usage and temperatures a little. But it is a price that I will have to pay for now, I guess.
In your bootloader (e.g. grub or grub4dos) add the following kernel option:
Code: Select all
processor.max_cstate=1
Code: Select all
usbcore.autosuspend=1
Code: Select all
title fluppy 009
find --set-root --ignore-floppies /fluppy/initrd.gz
kernel /fluppy/vmlinuz pmedia=atahd psubdir=fluppy processor.max_cstate=1 usbcore.autosuspend=1
initrd /fluppy/initrd.gz
[color=green]An expert is just a beginner with experience.[/color]
Shamelessly representing [url=http://www.tdem.co.nz]TdeM[/url]!
Shamelessly representing [url=http://www.tdem.co.nz]TdeM[/url]!
Re: Testing Fluppy on Toshiba Satellite L305
There is a google chrome sfs linked in the first post that might be better.tlcstat wrote:Greetings,
Thanks for a great disto (fluppy 10). I don't have a netbook but it runs better than any puppy I've tried so far. Currently using it on a Toshiba Satellite L305. Thing that got me to testing Fluppy is the fact that it had bluetooth and I like using my bt mouse. At this point I have loaded the OpenOffice.sfs, the Google Chrome Stable.deb off of their site (I had to copy a link to the desktop from /opt/google/chrome, Kompozer, Nero Linux 4, medibuntu, gpfind, firefox (pet). My Motorola Quantico tethers just fine using the PupDial and of course I preload the modprobe usbserial instructions for internet. Still trying to get DVD95Converter to run (library problem). And I haven't tried bluetooth dialup with my phone yet. Will keep you posted. O' yes I'm booting puppy from my Ubuntu Maverick ext4 partition. Puppy is the first linux system I was able to get working until I found Ubuntu over a year ago. Ubuntu let me get weaned from M$. I've been 100% Linux for over a year. My wife is all Linux except for Quicken running in wine. Anyway its nice to have a really great Puppy to work with. If I can get all of my apps going I may just switch full time.
Thanks
tlcstat
Yeah, I'm switching out the parole plugin for mozplugger that opens the real parole - that seems to work better.magerlab wrote:ended up for now with scripts from archlinux wiki
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Samsung_N150
fn keys are still not seen,but i use alt and arrows instead in xbinkeys
noticed that parole plugin starts but can not play anything
tried beryl sfs (from nov 17) just for fun
surprisingly it works (the wm) but cairo-dock crashes
played a bit with my daughter with cube
It's not the gparted from 4.3.1, it's Technosaurus' 4.4 build. Anyhoo, I've updated both Gparted and Libparted for the next release.jamesbond wrote:.
I think Fluppy's gparted failure to detect your MS partition is because it is rather old (based on puppy 4.3.1). For my case, I used Fatdog64's gparted instead. It works to resize the NTFS partition - you don't need to do it from Windows. If your machine is not 64-bit capable, you can try gparted from any other newer puppies also.
Not to rush you, I can't imagine how you keep the pace that you do, but just wondering when Fluppy 11 is due ... approximately.
I need to plan my time to update the 7 computers that I manage.
I need to plan my time to update the 7 computers that I manage.
[b]Thanks! David[/b]
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
[i]Home page: [/i][url]http://nevils-station.com[/url]
[i]Don't google[/i] [b]Search![/b] [url]http://duckduckgo.com[/url]
TahrPup64 & Lighthouse64-b602 & JL64-603
- maxpro4u
- Posts: 293
- Joined: Sat 19 Jun 2010, 18:20
- Location: Rittman,Ohio,USA, In dog years,I'm dead
- Contact:
I installed shinobar's samba-3.0.26-3.sfs to my full install of fluppy.
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... 453#483453
It works fine but now the extended partition icons on my desktop are gone
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... 453#483453
It works fine but now the extended partition icons on my desktop are gone
Dell D610 1.7M w/1024mb
Testing Slacko and a few others
I'm Max Wachtel and I approve this message.
Registered Linux User #393236
Testing Slacko and a few others
I'm Max Wachtel and I approve this message.
Registered Linux User #393236
VirtualBox
Has anyone gotten VirtualBox to work in Fluppy?
I get the following message:
Kernel driver not installed (rc=-1908)
The VirtualBox Linux kernel driver (vboxdrv) is either not loaded or there is a permission problem with /dev/vboxdrv. Please reinstall the kernel module by executing
'/etc/init.d/vboxdrv setup'
as root. Users of Ubuntu, Fedora or Mandriva should install the DKMS package first. This package keeps track of Linux kernel changes and recompiles the vboxdrv kernel module if necessary.
When I attempt to run that command, nothing happens. This is the only thing that has not worked so far in using Fluppy.
Thanks
I get the following message:
Kernel driver not installed (rc=-1908)
The VirtualBox Linux kernel driver (vboxdrv) is either not loaded or there is a permission problem with /dev/vboxdrv. Please reinstall the kernel module by executing
'/etc/init.d/vboxdrv setup'
as root. Users of Ubuntu, Fedora or Mandriva should install the DKMS package first. This package keeps track of Linux kernel changes and recompiles the vboxdrv kernel module if necessary.
When I attempt to run that command, nothing happens. This is the only thing that has not worked so far in using Fluppy.
Thanks