![]() ![]() On my on disk one I only made one save with one name and I've been updating it ever since. I assumed that no matter what you called them it would always load the most recently created one or something because I was never given the option to choose them. On the USB i kept making new saves and calling them different things but I did not realize that they where not actually being saved on the exFAT ventoy drive. Where it is actually being placed, could be causing issues being found and used. You could actually be writing over the same single default named save. If the save is made using only the default name. That is an option when you make the save. I actually slowly came around to realizing how useful having an operating system on a usb can be lol.Įach one has to have an additional name on it. I'm not really sure what you mean though about formatting the first partition? Wouldn't that reformat ventoy and make it (the ventoy) not work? Or would it magically somehow go from exFAT to ext4 without destroying any of the files already on it? Is there any way to point to a save in a different drive that does have the correct filesystem? Or does the pupsave have to be on the same drive as the puppy is being booted from? I'm probably just going to flash a new drive to be completely ext4 with just puppy on it and no ventoy and just have a drive solely for puppy lol. Yep this is the reason! I realized that on the puppy from ventoy I couldn't mount the first partition because it is in exfat. ![]() It should have the info, for where the save is being placed. ![]() When you run the save process and made the save. I am guessing, any saves you had made, are being placed on the computers, internal drive. This will also give you option to make the save a file or a folder. The option, to place the save on this partition, should be offered. Use some program like Gparted, to change the format of this first partition. So, do this before you put any ISOs on this first partition. You just need to copy iso files to this partition. The 1st partition was formated with exFAT filesystem. The Ventoy 1.0.54 release also adds support for WinPE with PESET.EXE, improves support for Trisquel GNU/Linux 10 and Untangle’s NG Firewall, adds support for Porteus 5.0 RC3, and fixes a couple of bugs.After using Ventoy to setup the USB drive.Īfter the installation is complete, the USB drive will be divided into 2 partitions. Of course, you can always switch to the command-line mode using Ctrl+Alt+F2, but personally I find it faster to work with the GUI. The GUI is actually called Ventoy2Disk and it was available only when using the tool from the tarball downloaded from the project’s GitHub page.īut now, with the Ventoy 1.0.54 release, you can use the Ventoy GUI straight from the live ISO image on virtually any operating system. The Ventoy GUI was first released last month for Linux systems, supporting both GTK and Qt UI technologies. Until now, Ventoy’s live ISO only offered a command-line interface for creating multiboot USB drives, but now everything is easier with the Ventoy GUI. The latest release, Ventoy 1.0.54, is out now with a GUI mode for its live ISO image, which is based on the lightweight Tiny Core Linux distribution. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |