I recently learned about this distro and checked some reviews. It does have a 
pretty extensive tool set and it loads it to RAM so you can install it on a 
b0rK3d Linux box.

In a previous IT work life, I used Linux boxes to troubleshoot network 
problems. I cobbled a dependable toolset together mostly from the Stanford 
Linear Accelerator Network Monitoring Website, 
https://www.slac.stanford.edu/xorg/nmtf/nmtf-tools.html and late night browsing 
of the Debian software repository.

I've done some troubleshooting and fixing of Linux servers and my own Linux 
boxes but I've never had what seems to be a rescue distro.

The reviews talked a lot about the pre-packaged toolset but not much about how, 
when to use which tools and if they were the actual tools that could fix 
real-world Linux problems.

I'm curious to know the thoughts of any Linux IT pros about a distro like this 
or if you'd be interested in sharing a toolset you've cobbled together that you 
rely on to rescue Linux systems.

Thanks,

Mike

Sent with [Proton Mail](https://proton.me/) secure email.

Reply via email to