School is starting up soon, and I want to install a stable distro to a 64GB flash drive that i own will remain stable while booting onto at least 2 computers (my home PC for maintenance and my School laptop for, well school).
I was thinking of just using Debian, but wasn’t sure if it would work well in terms of compatibility with my requirements.
Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
Ventoy + as many ISOs as you want
This. Even if I don’t see a purpose to go anything beyond Armbian + Debian + “prebuilt” Manjaro.
Interesting! But will changes made to the OS you’re using be persistent? If I’m reading this right, then probably not, right?
You can you will have to set somethings up for it.
That’s interesting, I’d be interested in finding out more about that. Let’s see, I’ve always wanted to try this:
@[email protected], how do you set up Ventoy for persistent installs of distros? That is, to be able to make changes to the operating system and have them stick?
Creating persistent live USBs with Ventoy is possible. However, keep in mind that not all Linux distributions support this feature. The distributions that Ventoy currently supports for persistent installations are Ubuntu and some of its derivatives.
Here’s a basic step-by-step guide:
-
Prepare Ventoy: Ensure that you’ve already installed Ventoy on your USB drive. If not, download the latest Ventoy release from its official website and install it to your USB drive.
-
Prepare the ISO file: Download the ISO file of the Linux distribution and copy it to the Ventoy USB drive. You can just put it in the root directory.
-
Create a persistence file: Ventoy uses a data file to enable the persistence feature. You need to create this file on the Ventoy USB drive, there is an official utility named
create_vtoy_img.sh
in Linux orVentoy2Disk.exe
on Windows that you can use to create this persistence data file. Name the file and define its size according to how much persistent storage you need. -
Bootstrap the persistence feature: After creating the data file, you should create a JSON file in the Ventoy USB drive to bootstrap the persistence feature. You can create a
.json
file in the root directory of the Ventoy USB drive with the following format:
{ "persistence" : [ { "image" : "/your-linux-distro.iso", "backend" : "/ventoy-persistent-data-file.dat" } ] }
Replace
your-linux-distro.iso
with the filename of your Linux distro ISO file and replaceventoy-persistent-data-file.dat
with your Ventoy persistent data file’s name.- Boot from the Ventoy USB drive: Finally, boot your computer from the Ventoy USB drive. The Linux distro will launch with the persistence feature, so you’ll be able to save any changes you make.
Remember this is a generalized guide and actual steps can vary based on the specific distro, and tools being used.
Hope this helps! If you encounter issues or have further questions, feel free to ask.
Huh, well, that doesn’t seem very convenient at all. I’m not all that interested in Ubuntu-based distros, for one.
Still, the ChatGPT bot seems to work well, so that’s pretty cool.
Arch and fedora are supported as well.
-
Do yourself a favor and get an external hard drive. You’ll get much better results and can run almost any distro with it.
Even better get a NVMe enclosure and an internal NVMe drive.
Enclosures are $20 and you can get a 500gb Samsung 970 Evo for $35.
Smaller, lighter, cheaper and faster than any off the shelf portable drive you could get. I have one and it fully saturates the USB C 10Gbit port on my motherboard.
Definitely this.
I gave up on thumb drives as they are kind of trash. External NVMe drives are affordable, and the speed difference is BIG.
somehow no one said puppy linux. it’s small, fast and functional. there is an compatible debian version here - https://vanilla-dpup.github.io/
I use puppy Linux all the time. Works great, on a fairly crappy USB stick. It saves files to the stick and saves user preferences and everything. Very recommended from my end.
Tails!
Although I think tails is great, this isn’t the ideal use case
You could try Tails, it’s specifically made for this purpose. It’s ui is a bit old looking though, and it’s not that user friendly. If you can stand xfce or kde though, you’ll feel right at home though.
It’s more about your software requirements then anything else.
Stable distros can be a pain when run as a desktop, so that might need to be rethought.
OpenSuse Tumbleweed is a rolling distro which deserves a look.
Endeavor OS for something Arch based.
Debian Testing is rolling for something Debian.
Fedora is semi-rolling for something in the red hat ecosystem.
OpenSuse Leap is a stable distro which gets bumped once a year, so that might be an option.
Do you want it to be persistent(all your stuff is saved) or you dont mind it starting fresh everytime you plug in to devices?
One piece of advice I want to throw in here: Use a proper file system! exFAT or F2FS are flash-aware and will ensure that you dom’t kill your drive by frequent writes to the same memory cells!
Alpine works great off a usb, I run sway and quite a few other bits off it on a run-from-ram/encrypted config.
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Never really got manjaro, never got around to it on my distro hopping spree.
Isn’t it just arch underneath?
it’s arch but they have their own repo and hold back most packages for a week to make sure they don’t break something before deploying them, with moderate success, their main particularity though is to have attracted the hatred of arch users since their creation and even mentioning the name will get you a full lecture about how they’re eating babies and selling their body parts
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If they would just remove access to the AUR it would solve some things. I used it for years before just getting the itch to distro hop. It worked just fine for me, and I only used the AUR for a handful of things. Now, I’ll either compile myself or use flatpak if it’s not in any normal repo for any distro I land on.
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there should be an authentication system certifying that your computer is using the right set of software before getting acess to the aur, it would be called the “os integrity api” and prevent the use of the aur from unapproved 3rd party software, all you would need to do is to log in to your verified arch user account and request a monthly aur usage token to be created and used by your registered system for the low price of 9.99
Arch users gonna arch