![]() ![]() Might also depend exactly how you got into the chroot, etc. ![]() as in not present at all, or not on PATH? Super easy to add to PATH. ![]() As a result, almost nothing worked in the chroot until I added those to the rescue system. That's not bad by itself, but Arch is missing some crucial paths that Debian has, /bin and /usr/sbin among them. SystemRescueCd in general is good, it's Arch based. but if you want/need that full GUI environment, well, it's there too. Well, then don't use a "Live" version, or don't boot it into "Live" mode - you can boot the regular installer on most or all of those images, and can also do so in or go into rescue mode on those, or if on boots "Live", switch quite immediately to another virtual terminal, and proceed with shell in short order, without need to wait for the whole GUI environment to fire up. Tried a Debian Live CD, but in that situation I do not need to wait until the whole user interface has booted from a slow USB drive, I just need a shell So, know almost nothing about your particular use case or objectives.So, I'm just gonna guess/presume for rescuing/repairing Debian hosts and their data.In that case, the Debian ISOs I've mentioned are quite excellent for that. on a separate USB, or one could use one of the unofficial non-free "Live" ISOs, if one needs that firmware in place when booting "Live" to be sufficiently useful/functional on one's hardware.īut. If you might need non-free firmware in a rescue scenario, you could just also have that prepared in advance, e.g. Anyone know of a Debian-based rescue CD/USB system? ![]()
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