Nope! I used "your work" for a while before you had one of your tantrums and pulled the plug. 'Your work' as such is unstable (and rides on the back of giants) best deleted as you did and ignored/forgotten.saintless wrote:You are the one who benefits from my work
XenialDog 64bit (Ubuntu 'Xenial Xerus' LTS, 64-bit)
Just to name the last one you use often:rufwoof wrote:Nope! I used "your work" for a while before you had one of your tantrums and pulled the plug. 'Your work' as such is unstable (and rides on the back of giants) best deleted as you did and ignored/forgotten.saintless wrote:You are the one who benefits from my work
http://murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic. ... ce5#949933
You are welcome.
Every DD thread or page or commit started by me shows I ride on the back of giants (Debian and Debian-live teams). I wouldn't hide that for one minute.
Please, dont turn this into a fight. I wrote nothing wrong or false and you know it.
Toni
Vapourware. Apparently tied to the mental volatility of a single drama queen.backi wrote:Hi rufwoof!Could you please elaborate a bit further on this . Would be quite informative and helpful to know about .I moved over to that due to the instability of DebianDog.
Regards !
Correction, frugally booted in a very special way. Empty squashfs with all system content in persistence (file, folder or partition). The way I made the very first DebianDog base years ago, booting with persistence read-only most of the time and save on demand when you need. All this discovered or invented and shared by me after exploring the live-boot scripts. I'm sure you know this very well and you have the source inside your version save on demand script changed for live-boot newer version.rufwoof wrote:Play with, not use. I use core (pure) Debian as my main boot (frugally booted).
Fred gave you the links to this part of my work.
You are welcome one more time.
Name calling again. Did I ever call you insulting names?rufwoof wrote:Vapourware. Apparently tied to the mental volatility of a single drama queen.
You ride on my back, rufwoof. Shame on you!
This conversation with you really starts to look like troll behaviour. No more answers from me on that subject in this thread.
Toni
Don't use that at all now. All pure Debian only. After the plug was pulled on DebianDog I did try various things and had to get into coding things for myself. But settled on pure Debian so as to avoid the need to do and maintain that, as provided by the debian live project/team.saintless wrote:inside your version save on demand script changed for live-boot newer version.
All in filesystem.squashfs except for /boot and /home - which is on a second partition so that changes under /home are preserved (persistent). Plymouth glow graphical boot theme
title Jessie
find --set-root /live/jessieamd64lxde
kernel /vmlinuz boot=live quiet splash
initrd /initrd.img
root that is only ever used at the command prompt level due to the insecurities in X
standard userid that is used as a admin under gui and for access/moving personal files in and out of its secure area
restricted userid that is generally used for browsing/internet (most often used userid).
For kernel updates I just extract the filesystem.squashfs to / and boot as though a full install, apply updates and reform a new filesystem.squashfs
No extra repositories and just use main (no contrib or non-free) ... using the proper Debian repositories
deb http://deb.debian.org/debian jessie main
deb http://security.debian.org/ jessie/updates main
In short ... nothing of yours. And I most certainly wouldn't thank you for the headache caused by DebianDog being abandoned.
You are welcome anyway. Headache borns the great ideas. Open source projects come and go and we all step on the shoulders of those before us and move forward and higher. I made sure DebianDog is a self-maintaining system and the review page confirms this:rufwoof wrote:And I most certainly wouldn't thank you for the headache caused by DebianDog being abandoned.
Fred also agrees there wouldn't be XenialDog without DebianDog.Bottom Line
The earlier versions of DebianDog work flawlessly...
Even Debian has one more passanger - rufwoof.
Nothing is lost
Toni
Code: Select all
root@xenial64:~# whereami
root@xenial64:~# You are in the Xenialdog64 thread
root@xenial64:~# whathappened --help
root@xenial64:~# usage: whathappened [OPTION]
--got-lost (tell me if someone got lost somehow)
--off-topic (tell me if there are a lot of off-topic conversations)
root@xenial64:~# whathappened --got-lost --off-topic
root@xenial64:~# Scanning thread, please wait . .
Results:
> One or more persons got lost in this thread.
> Detected a lot of off-topic conversations recently
> Advice: Don't take any part in this thread for a while and things will usually get back to normal.
root@xenial64:~#
No yad version of this script, Fred? Disappointing...fredx181 wrote:Code: Select all
root@xenial64:~# whereami root@xenial64:~# You are in the Xenialdog64 thread root@xenial64:~# whathappened --help root@xenial64:~# usage: whathappened [OPTION] --got-lost (tell me if someone got lost somehow) --off-topic (tell me if there are a lot of off-topic conversations) root@xenial64:~# whathappened --got-lost --off-topic root@xenial64:~# Scanning thread, please wait . . Results: > One or more persons got lost in this thread. > Detected a lot of off-topic conversations recently > Advice: Don't take any part in this thread for a while and things will usually get back to normal. root@xenial64:~#
But fair enough. No more off-topic.
Toni
Don't worry, it will comeNo yad version of this script, Fred? Disappointing...
Also I'm working now on a NEAT! tool called "whatami"
It's a work in progress... the purpose is to find out if you are a troll.
Also coming up a WOW! tool "whatishe" it gives advice how to handle trolls etc...
So keep watching this thread!!
WOW... Fred spoke to me...
Toni
I will and I will show you none of the scripts work as expected. As usualfredx181 wrote:Don't worry, it will comeNo yad version of this script, Fred? Disappointing...
Also I'm working now on a NEAT! tool called "whatami"
It's a work in progress... the purpose is to find out if you are a troll.
Also coming up a WOW! tool "whatishe" it gives advice how to handle trolls etc...
So keep watching this thread!!
Toni
Preview of whatishe:
(need to work on some more tips and tricks, but already useful I think)
(need to work on some more tips and tricks, but already useful I think)
Code: Select all
root@xenial64:~# whatishe
Warning: dangerous troll found
> You must absolutely pay NO attention to him!
> You recently DID pay attention to him, NEVER do that anymore.
> Type 'Sorry'
root@xenial64:~# Sorry
Ok, but don't let it happen again!
root@xenial64:~#
Hope not, backi. I will not really test again any scripts from Fred. Just kidding about that.backi wrote:Hi fred .....hi Toni....!
Me.... after all those crazy disputes..... being heavily traumatised...... just want to know.... fred ....Toni ..... tell me please ....you both are just kidding...
or is this the Overture for another Massacre ?
Regards
Traumatised backi
Unfortunately rufwoof didn't take my advice here:
http://murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic. ... 7f3#956950
I wrote nothing insulting or not related to Ubuntu/Debian/Xenial and Fred many times stated it is on-topic.
I will not take any part in this further.
Toni
Sorry Dr. backi, I should have better kept my mouth shut.backi wrote:Hi fred .....hi Toni....!
Me.... after all those crazy disputes..... being heavily traumatised...... just want to know.... fred ....Toni ..... tell me please ....you both are just kidding...
or is this the Overture for another Massacre ?
Regards
Traumatised backi
Probably there will be no next time, but if there is just write:
hi fred ! SHUTUP
(then I know and will obey your orders, but don't forgot to add some smilies )
Fred
Just a tip:
Porteus-boot (initrd) loads list of modules blindly no matter if the hardware needs them or not. Removing some of the modules from the list will speed up the boot process a little. Removing the kernel drivers missing in the modprobe command list from initrd will reduce also its size.
Toni
Porteus-boot (initrd) loads list of modules blindly no matter if the hardware needs them or not. Removing some of the modules from the list will speed up the boot process a little. Removing the kernel drivers missing in the modprobe command list from initrd will reduce also its size.
Toni