Re: [Dorset] Adding files to a Live Disc, separate to the core image
On Wednesday 08 Dec 2010, Ralph Corderoy wrote: > Earlier you were talking about having your files outside the TC ISO. Is > that because you want to ship the big ISO once and then ship your little > files often? Or do you want to append a new set of your files to the > end of an existing CD with the TC ISO plus old sets of your files > already on it? We want to do the former, but allow others to build a CD from the sum of the parts. > If neither of these then what Sean suggests seems easiest. Produce your > own TC ISO that includes your things. > > http://wiki.tinycorelinux.com/Remastering > > (They seem confused towards the end. The mkisofs is one logical line, > as they say, but someone's saying there were slases on their own, they > would of been, or should have been, backslashes to say that the physical > line is continued logically on the next one.) There's a GUI tool called 'ezremaster' (http://wiki.tinycorelinux.com/Remastering+with+ezremaster) which makes the whole job fairly straightforward. The problem is that it takes a while to fill in all the blanks, just to end up with almost the same thing each time. Also, it would be nice to stitch the scripts into the ISO 'off line' so to speak. -- Terry Coles 64 bit computing with Kubuntu Linux -- Next meeting: The Broadway, Bournemouth, Tuesday 2010-12-14 20:00 Meets, Mailing list, IRC, LinkedIn, ... http://dorset.lug.org.uk/ How to Report Bugs Effectively: http://goo.gl/4Xue
Re: [Dorset] Adding files to a Live Disc, separate to the core image
On Wednesday 08 Dec 2010, Sean Gibbins wrote: > On 08/12/10 17:36, Terry Coles wrote: > > I think I asked the wrong question (or the right question asked wrongly). > > What we really want to do is to burn a disc that consists of the TC ISO > > (which will rarely change) and add some additional scripts/config files > > (which will change frequently) at the same time. > > So presumably one possible solution is that you simply re-author the ISO > image for each updated version? That's how we were thinking when started this. The trouble is that authoring the ISO for TC is a bit convoluted and we don't want to do it every time we change a script. We also want it to be posible for others to add the modified scripts using the TC core ISO as the starting point. These 'others' may only have access to WinBlows, so we really need a simple way of creating an image by somehow drilling into the core ISO. > Or am I missing the point again? Nope, I just don't explain myself very well. What we want to end up with is an almost bog-standard TC Live disk that includes those packages (extensions in TC speak that we need by default. The half a dozen or so scripts will then be included somehow so that they run when the Live disc boots. We will then harvest the O/Ps for processing on a separate machine. -- Terry Coles 64 bit computing with Kubuntu Linux -- Next meeting: The Broadway, Bournemouth, Tuesday 2010-12-14 20:00 Meets, Mailing list, IRC, LinkedIn, ... http://dorset.lug.org.uk/ How to Report Bugs Effectively: http://goo.gl/4Xue
Re: [Dorset] Adding files to a Live Disc, separate to the core image
Hi Terry, > I think I asked the wrong question (or the right question asked > wrongly). What we really want to do is to burn a disc that consists > of the TC ISO (which will rarely change) and add some additional > scripts/config files (which will change frequently) at the same time. Earlier you were talking about having your files outside the TC ISO. Is that because you want to ship the big ISO once and then ship your little files often? Or do you want to append a new set of your files to the end of an existing CD with the TC ISO plus old sets of your files already on it? If neither of these then what Sean suggests seems easiest. Produce your own TC ISO that includes your things. http://wiki.tinycorelinux.com/Remastering (They seem confused towards the end. The mkisofs is one logical line, as they say, but someone's saying there were slases on their own, they would of been, or should have been, backslashes to say that the physical line is continued logically on the next one.) Cheers, Ralph. -- Next meeting: The Broadway, Bournemouth, Tuesday 2010-12-14 20:00 Meets, Mailing list, IRC, LinkedIn, ... http://dorset.lug.org.uk/ How to Report Bugs Effectively: http://goo.gl/4Xue
Re: [Dorset] Adding files to a Live Disc, separate to the core image
On 08/12/10 17:36, Terry Coles wrote: > I think I asked the wrong question (or the right question asked wrongly). > What we really want to do is to burn a disc that consists of the TC ISO > (which > will rarely change) and add some additional scripts/config files (which will > change frequently) at the same time. So presumably one possible solution is that you simply re-author the ISO image for each updated version? Once you establish a method it shouldn't be too difficult to set aside a directory for your scripts, which is updated while the OS remains untouched. As long as the scripts use established static names, tinkering with the OS portion would be largely unnecessary. Or am I missing the point again? ;-) Sean -- music, film, comics, books, rants and drivel: www.funkygibbins.me.uk -- Next meeting: The Broadway, Bournemouth, Tuesday 2010-12-14 20:00 Meets, Mailing list, IRC, LinkedIn, ... http://dorset.lug.org.uk/ How to Report Bugs Effectively: http://goo.gl/4Xue
Re: [Dorset] Adding files to a Live Disc, separate to the core image
On Wednesday 08 Dec 2010, John Carlyle-Clarke wrote: > On 08/12/10 11:41, StarLion wrote: > >> 1. Is it possible to physically burn an ISO that consists of the ISO > >> created in Tiny Core, plus the additional files added later? If so, > >> how is it done? > > > > Gnome's Brasero writer has the option to burn an image to a physical > > medium, but leave it open to add more things to the compilation after > > the image is burnt. > > How one goes about adding them afterwards I'm not certain though, as > > I've never needed to do it myself. > > Puppy linux has this ability. It can boot off a live CD, and on shut > down all changes made to the file system are written to an incremental > diff file that is then burned on to the end of the CD if it is not > fixed. Those files can also be written onto a USB stick if booting from > USB. You can also specify any arbitrary location, e.g. the hard disc of > the machine you're working on. I think I asked the wrong question (or the right question asked wrongly). What we really want to do is to burn a disc that consists of the TC ISO (which will rarely change) and add some additional scripts/config files (which will change frequently) at the same time. -- Terry Coles 64 bit computing with Kubuntu Linux -- Next meeting: The Broadway, Bournemouth, Tuesday 2010-12-14 20:00 Meets, Mailing list, IRC, LinkedIn, ... http://dorset.lug.org.uk/ How to Report Bugs Effectively: http://goo.gl/4Xue
Re: [Dorset] Adding files to a Live Disc, separate to the core image
On 08/12/10 11:41, StarLion wrote: 1. Is it possible to physically burn an ISO that consists of the ISO created in Tiny Core, plus the additional files added later? If so, how is it done? Gnome's Brasero writer has the option to burn an image to a physical medium, but leave it open to add more things to the compilation after the image is burnt. How one goes about adding them afterwards I'm not certain though, as I've never needed to do it myself. Puppy linux has this ability. It can boot off a live CD, and on shut down all changes made to the file system are written to an incremental diff file that is then burned on to the end of the CD if it is not fixed. Those files can also be written onto a USB stick if booting from USB. You can also specify any arbitrary location, e.g. the hard disc of the machine you're working on. -- Next meeting: The Broadway, Bournemouth, Tuesday 2010-12-14 20:00 Meets, Mailing list, IRC, LinkedIn, ... http://dorset.lug.org.uk/ How to Report Bugs Effectively: http://goo.gl/4Xue
Re: [Dorset] Adding files to a Live Disc, separate to the core image
> 1. Is it possible to physically burn an ISO that consists of the ISO created > in > Tiny Core, plus the additional files added later? If so, how is it done? Gnome's Brasero writer has the option to burn an image to a physical medium, but leave it open to add more things to the compilation after the image is burnt. How one goes about adding them afterwards I'm not certain though, as I've never needed to do it myself. -- Next meeting: The Broadway, Bournemouth, Tuesday 2010-12-14 20:00 Meets, Mailing list, IRC, LinkedIn, ... http://dorset.lug.org.uk/ How to Report Bugs Effectively: http://goo.gl/4Xue