Tiny Core Linux
General TC => General TC Talk => Topic started by: drtrppr on November 13, 2015, 09:03:30 AM
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Hello,
I'm able to install and run TC on USB using unetbootin.
To make extensions persistent, I've read you have to do some tweaking, but it is recommended to use core2usb.
Problem with core2usb is that after selecting the iso and selecting the drive, the 'install' button doesn't get active, so the install doesn't take place.
I'm using core2usb on win10.
What do next?
Regards,
drtrppr
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bmarkus should be able to comment on core2usb.
You can also use the native installer in CorePlus, two ways:
- burn it to a CD, boot it, install to USB
- boot CorePlus in a VM, pass your USB stick to the VM, install
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Which ISO file you tried to install with core2usb?
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bmarkus should be able to comment on core2usb.
You can also use the native installer in CorePlus, two ways:
- burn it to a CD, boot it, install to USB
Thanks, but don't have CD-drive available.
- boot CorePlus in a VM, pass your USB stick to the VM, install
Neither a VM.
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Which ISO file you tried to install with core2usb?
The TinyCore-current as available in the download section.
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Hi!
You can use the UUID of the device to let opt and home boot codes know that it may load content from your USB drive. Works for me everytime I needed it.
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The empty USB drive shown needs to be double-clicked in the "Select target removable drive" area before the Install button is available. It has worked flawlessly for me many times.
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You can use the UUID of the device to let opt and home boot codes know that it may load content from your USB drive. Works for me everytime I needed it.
That will be the last resort, hope that gets clear what's wrong with my working with tool.
According to comment on sourceforge, i'm not the only one who has trouble with tool. Last win-version the wiki on Sourceforge mention's is win 7, does this tool work with newer win's?
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The empty USB drive shown needs to be double-clicked in the "Select target removable drive" area before the Install button is available. It has worked flawlessly for me many times.
I've done 1 click, double click, triple click etc.
When clicking the message that drive is not empty shows up, although I did format the drive. I've read somewhere on this forum not to pay attention to the message and just go on, but that's impossible in my case.
On what win version did it work flawlessly?
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The problem is simple, the number one rule is do not use unetbootin to install tinycore to a USB stick.
Use the install utility provided in coreplus iso or try to understand what you are doing wrong when using other tools such as core2usb
I'm also using Win10 so give me a minute here I'll try to figure out what's going on here
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@ B. Markus
I use Win8.1 and Win10 so I figured I could assist. I've attempted to install TC iso to a USB via core2usb v1.6, v1.5 and v1.1 on both win8.1 and Win10
I considered that I was doing something wrong also because I rarely use such tools in favor of installing to USB's manually, however the error I show on attempts with an empty USB formatted with either FAT32, or NTFS is "the drive is not empty" and of course the app will not allow a user to override this scenario. If the USB is wiped and left unallocated the USB thumb drive is not recognized at all.
So it's a catch 22, it appears the drive needs a file system and a drive letter for core2usb to recognize it in win8.1 and up, yet if the drive has a file system the utility reports that the drive is not empty..
I'm still attempting to find a workaround for our friends here and almost succeeded by formatting the USB with ext2, jury is still out..
I've attached an error log
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@ drtrppr
In the meantime, try the "rufus" utility from http://rufus.akeo.ie/ . select your ISO and leave all the default options. before rebooting to the USB simply change the "cde" directory name to "tce" (obviously without the quotation marks)
then boot to your USB and select "Tinycore with Wait for USB" option
You might also want to remove the copy2fs.lst file within your new tce directory.
you should be set, I just tried this to be sure it worked and it does
you might also have to set your BIOS to boot in legacy mode
good luck
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Hi
To help users, I think there should be 2 isos, one for cd (with cde dir) and the other for usb (with tce dir).
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ISO9660 is a read only filesystem, so it makes no sense to have a tce directory in it.
Just do a normal install onto the USB drive.
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using unetbootin in with the usb iso makes a working tc
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For some strange definition of working.
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because tc autoscans for a dir called tce
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Then rename it yourself.
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people who just tries tc don't have the time to read corebook.
People try distro with unetbootin and tc doesn't work just because of this cde/tce problem; and most of the time also waitusb is needed.
The modern people which otherwise uses a virtual machine, or the old ones who burn the cd don't suffer the problem
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Don't use unetbootin. Just dd the ISO to the flash drive.
Core is not for people who just want to try it. It is a toolkit, and people need to learn how to use their tools.
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Why should we support a third-party installer? There are lots of them in addition to unetbootin, slippery slope. It's also a known fact unetbootin botches many other distros as well.
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Unetbootin is the most famous. Maybe we could communicate with the makers to properly handle our distro.
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So it's a catch 22, it appears the drive needs a file system and a drive letter for core2usb to recognize it in win8.1 and up, yet if the drive has a file system the utility reports that the drive is not empty..
Ok, so core2usb doesn't work with win8/win10. Guess core2usb isn't maintained anymore, will look into the alternatives (Since the tool gets downloaded a few dozen times a week, a warning line in the wiki seems appropriate? What's the routine with TC?).
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With Linux
dd if=isofile of=rawflashdrive
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In the meantime, try the "rufus" utility from http://rufus.akeo.ie/ . select your ISO and leave all the default options. before rebooting to the USB simply change the "cde" directory name to "tce" (obviously without the quotation marks)
then boot to your USB and select "Tinycore with Wait for USB" option
Seems to work. Booted, installed some apps, rebooted, and aps were still available.
You might also want to remove the copy2fs.lst file within your new tce directory.
Didn't remove it, are there pro's/con's?
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Hi
To help users, I think there should be 2 isos, one for cd (with cde dir) and the other for usb (with tce dir).
Think would have helped me.
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ISO9660 is a read only filesystem, so it makes no sense to have a tce directory in it.
Just do a normal install onto the USB drive.
That's what puzzles me a bit, this is exactly what I haven done, didn't I?
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But in the end what puzzles me most, why have a core2usb, when you can get things working with rufus(-like tools)? Or is the main thing core2usb does is renaming the directory?
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Hi drtrppr
But in the end what puzzles me most, why have a core2usb, when you can get things working with rufus(-like tools)? Or is the main thing core2usb does is renaming the directory?
The purpose was to have a Windows based tool to install Tinycore to USB and put an end to people using one of the
dozens of install tools out there that don't handle Tinycore correctly.
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Well, both with unetbootin and rufus i'm able to make bootable usb-stick with TC. Renaming directory cde to tce makes extensions persistent, without doing any further adjustments. Since the recommended core2usb doesn't work in a win8 win10 environment, at least nowadays the non-Core tool seem to me a better way to go.