Re: external installation question

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



If you boot from an external hard drive, you can't eject and/or unmount it. The operating system won't allow it. What you want to say, I think, is that if you are booting from an external drive, whether it be an external hard drive or a flash drive, you should always do a shutdown before turning off your machine or disconnecting the drive.

Really, what you need to do is sync the drive. There is an old command, "sync" that does that. You can probably then do whatever you want. Obviously, you'll hang your machine if you boot from a flash drive, do a sync, and then remove the flash drive.But you could probably just plug the drive back in and reboot.

In fact, you can probably get away with booting from a flash drive, just yanking it out, then putting it back in and rebooting. But there you are playing the odds and there is no guarantee.






On 05/30/14 08:26, Paul Merrell wrote:
On Fri, May 30, 2014 at 5:46 AM,  <aerospace1028@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

If I understand correctly--once I get everything loaded on the external
drive and the boot order fixed--with the drive attached to my computer, I
will have the option to boot into archlinux, and with the drive
disconnected--while the machine is powered off--booting the machine will
revert to automatically jumping into the factory-installed Windows-7.  The
net effect should be similar to when I boot the live-CD: without the cd in
the tray (or this case the external drive plugged into the computer), my
computer will have no clue there are any other operating systems in
existance and just go happily on its way?  or as happily as my machine gets?

Not sure about archlinux's auto-recognition of USB devices. It works
that way on other recent distros I use or have used.

The big difference between a USB drive and a CD drive, from a user
standpoint, is that you *must* dismount the USB drive before you
disconnect it from the machine unless the machine is turned off. Some
distros call this "ejecting" the drive, although it does not
physically eject the drive.

With a USB 3 hard drive, you may wish to disconnect it when not in use
to save wear and tear from spinning. If you do, be sure to dismount it
before disconnecting *every* time. Disconnecting a USB thumb or hard
drive without dismounting it first will almost always cause grief on
Linux, sometimes resulting in an unusable drive. Much more commonly,
you'll hit difficulties in mounting it. There is probably a way to fix
such problems on Linux. But because I also have a Windows 7 system, I
have fixed most such problems by plugging the drive into the Windows
machine. In most cases, Windows will fix the problem without any extra
effort on my part. Then back to the Linux machine.

But I'm looking for a more trustworthy backup solution than an
external USB 3 drive. Too many problems, with three different
brands/models so far.

Best regards,

Paul




--
---
John G. Heim, 608-263-4189, jheim@xxxxxxxxxxxxx

_______________________________________________
Blinux-list mailing list
Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list




[Index of Archives]     [Linux Speakup]     [Fedora]     [Linux Kernel]     [Yosemite News]     [Big List of Linux Books]