Lupu-528 Booting questions
- ntzrmtthihu777
- Posts: 10
- Joined: Sun 17 Jun 2012, 19:29
Lupu-528 Booting questions
Hello all!
I am a new linux/puppy/ubuntu user, currently running Precise/Lupu/BT5 triple boot, and am looking to optimize puppy boot time. Currently I have puppy fully installed on partition of my laptop's second hard-drive (a no-no, I know XD) and am looking to boot it directly from the .iso file via the method here (10.04 boots real fast this way)
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1549847
but it won't work right out of the box, Which got me thinking 'maybe this isn't the most ideal way to do this.'
Main reason I got puppy was to have a backup os I could boot and use to fix my primary os (had to do it once already, broke my sudoers file), so I'm wondering which method works best/fastest:
1. A full install to a small partition
2. Frugal install into Ubuntu 12.04
3. Boot from flash stick
4. Boot directly from iso as mentioned above (plus helping me to boot this
way)
Any help would be appreciated.
I am a new linux/puppy/ubuntu user, currently running Precise/Lupu/BT5 triple boot, and am looking to optimize puppy boot time. Currently I have puppy fully installed on partition of my laptop's second hard-drive (a no-no, I know XD) and am looking to boot it directly from the .iso file via the method here (10.04 boots real fast this way)
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1549847
but it won't work right out of the box, Which got me thinking 'maybe this isn't the most ideal way to do this.'
Main reason I got puppy was to have a backup os I could boot and use to fix my primary os (had to do it once already, broke my sudoers file), so I'm wondering which method works best/fastest:
1. A full install to a small partition
2. Frugal install into Ubuntu 12.04
3. Boot from flash stick
4. Boot directly from iso as mentioned above (plus helping me to boot this
way)
Any help would be appreciated.
Re: Lupu-528 Booting questions
I am not certain, perhaps a more experienced puppy user can correct me, but I think I remember reading somewhere that a full install boots up faster than a frugal. Maybe choice #1 may be the fastest.ntzrmtthihu777 wrote:Hello all!
I am a new linux/puppy/ubuntu user, currently running Precise/Lupu/BT5 triple boot, and am looking to optimize puppy boot time. Currently I have puppy fully installed on partition of my laptop's second hard-drive (a no-no, I know XD) and am looking to boot it directly from the .iso file via the method here (10.04 boots real fast this way)
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1549847
but it won't work right out of the box, Which got me thinking 'maybe this isn't the most ideal way to do this.'
Main reason I got puppy was to have a backup os I could boot and use to fix my primary os (had to do it once already, broke my sudoers file), so I'm wondering which method works best/fastest:
1. A full install to a small partition
2. Frugal install into Ubuntu 12.04
3. Boot from flash stick
4. Boot directly from iso as mentioned above (plus helping me to boot this
way)
Any help would be appreciated.
My experience is with frugal installs. I think it is the best way to install puppy as long as there is enough RAM. Using Slacko 533, from the time I click puppy on the grub menu page, it is about 13 seconds until the puppy screen appears. This is with an older Dell Vostro 220 desktop with a pentium dual core E2140, 4 GB RAM, and an 80 GB 7200 SATA drive.
Re: Lupu-528 Booting questions
Puppy can't be booted this way.ntzrmtthihu777 wrote: am looking to boot it directly from the .iso file via the method here (10.04 boots real fast this way)
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1549847
but it won't work right out of the box
- ntzrmtthihu777
- Posts: 10
- Joined: Sun 17 Jun 2012, 19:29
Re: Lupu-528 Booting questions
frak, I was afraid of that. Thanks anyway.rcrsn51 wrote:Puppy can't be booted this way.ntzrmtthihu777 wrote: am looking to boot it directly from the .iso file via the method here (10.04 boots real fast this way)
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1549847
but it won't work right out of the box
Flash drive install slowest.
Hard drive frugal or full install.
Full install to hard drive partition is fastest boot. That is if about 5 sec. difference is that big a deal to you.
Hard drive frugal or full install.
Full install to hard drive partition is fastest boot. That is if about 5 sec. difference is that big a deal to you.
The things they do not tell you, are usually the clue to solving the problem.
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected
YaPI(any iso installer)
When I was a kid I wanted to be older.... This is not what I expected
YaPI(any iso installer)
- ntzrmtthihu777
- Posts: 10
- Joined: Sun 17 Jun 2012, 19:29
Well, like I said, I mainly use puppy as a rescue os, so the faster I can boot, fix the problem, reboot, continue using primary os the better. Thanksbigpup wrote:Flash drive install slowest.
Hard drive frugal or full install.
Full install to hard drive partition is fastest boot. That is if about 5 sec. difference is that big a deal to you.
If it's going to be used as a rescue OS then it shouldn't really be installed on the hard drive as the hard drive (or its boot mechanism) may have got frazzled.
If you install on a flash drive then the machine that is being rescued needs to have the capability of booting from flash.
The most usable system would have to be the Live CD and don't install at all. It's slower to boot but how often do you need to be rescued??
If by rescue you mean recovery from regular actions of another operating system then perhaps it is different. I use Puppy this way to clear out bumf collected during the operation of Windows. I use a frugal install for this but boot time differences between frugal and full install doesn't come into it for me. Frugal is simple and much quicker than Windows anyway.
If you install on a flash drive then the machine that is being rescued needs to have the capability of booting from flash.
The most usable system would have to be the Live CD and don't install at all. It's slower to boot but how often do you need to be rescued??
If by rescue you mean recovery from regular actions of another operating system then perhaps it is different. I use Puppy this way to clear out bumf collected during the operation of Windows. I use a frugal install for this but boot time differences between frugal and full install doesn't come into it for me. Frugal is simple and much quicker than Windows anyway.
I keep my rescue Puppy on a USB powered 1.5" hard disk - along with all my other useful stuff. But I carry an old single diskette case with both a boot floppy and a mini CD with Puppy etc on it, just in case the other boots are needed.
"Just think of it as leaving early to avoid the rush" - T Pratchett
- ntzrmtthihu777
- Posts: 10
- Joined: Sun 17 Jun 2012, 19:29
Perhaps 'rescue' is too strong of a word. As I said I'm a total noob and as such am taking it slow. I'm not screwing around with stuff that could really screw me over; I don't do anything I don't know how to undo through Puppy, mainly adding a line or two here and there, so all I have to do is boot puppy and delete the offending lines.ICPUG wrote:If it's going to be used as a rescue OS then it shouldn't really be installed on the hard drive as the hard drive (or its boot mechanism) may have got frazzled.
If you install on a flash drive then the machine that is being rescued needs to have the capability of booting from flash.
The most usable system would have to be the Live CD and don't install at all. It's slower to boot but how often do you need to be rescued??
If by rescue you mean recovery from regular actions of another operating system then perhaps it is different. I use Puppy this way to clear out bumf collected during the operation of Windows. I use a frugal install for this but boot time differences between frugal and full install doesn't come into it for me. Frugal is simple and much quicker than Windows anyway.
- ntzrmtthihu777
- Posts: 10
- Joined: Sun 17 Jun 2012, 19:29
I have puppy on disk, but my HP dv9000 has no optical drive (I know I can use Unetbootin or the Puppu Universal Installer to create a bootable usb, But I don't have a stick I can dedicate to this just yet. Living on a budget as I live in a homeless shelter XD)ntzrmtthihu777 wrote:Perhaps 'rescue' is too strong of a word. As I said I'm a total noob and as such am taking it slow. I'm not screwing around with stuff that could really screw me over; I don't do anything I don't know how to undo through Puppy, mainly adding a line or two here and there, so all I have to do is boot puppy and delete the offending lines.ICPUG wrote:If it's going to be used as a rescue OS then it shouldn't really be installed on the hard drive as the hard drive (or its boot mechanism) may have got frazzled.
If you install on a flash drive then the machine that is being rescued needs to have the capability of booting from flash.
The most usable system would have to be the Live CD and don't install at all. It's slower to boot but how often do you need to be rescued??
If by rescue you mean recovery from regular actions of another operating system then perhaps it is different. I use Puppy this way to clear out bumf collected during the operation of Windows. I use a frugal install for this but boot time differences between frugal and full install doesn't come into it for me. Frugal is simple and much quicker than Windows anyway.