I just bumped into the same thing, so I thought I'd post some notes here:
At first boot, one is being auto-logged in as tux
user; the problem is:
tux
user is "autogenerated" apparently
- When changes are saved for persistence, apparently, the home folder of the autogenerated
tux
user is not saved
Anyways, here I tried installing some programs (like xvkbd
) through Package Manager (Tazpanel - Packages); and to make them persistent, first:
- Right-click on Desktop, Slitaz Live, TazUSB Writefs (gzip)
This will save a rootfs.gz
file in /
- this one you must copy manually to the USB flash drive, where the others (rootfs1.gz, rootfs2.gz) are - in /boot
on the USB thumbdrive!
Then, you must also manually add this file to syslinux.cfg
! There is another problem here - if the usb thumbdrive is FAT-formatted, then the autologin command for the tux
user will fail - and you will get a login prompt/window instead; where you cannot login as tux
(which has an empty password by default, otherwise); you can only login as root
.
Thankfully, there is a way around this - note first, the default entry in syslinux.cfg
would be like this:
LABEL sli
KERNEL /boot/bzImage
append initrd=/boot/rootfs4.gz,/boot/rootfs3.gz,/boot/rootfs2.gz,/boot/rootfs1.gz rw root=/dev/null vga=normal autologin
Note, on that line one could also use home=
for persistence - but not on a FAT32 USB thumb (the login problem).
Then, you could copy the rootfs.gz
generated by Writefs previous as /boot/rootfsA.gz
; now if you try just
append initrd=/boot/rootfsA.gz rw root=/dev/null vga=normal autologin
... then you again get the login problem (though if you login as root, you'll see the installed programs are there).
The cool thing, is that you can add rootfsA.gz
along with the others in the append
line; if it is added at end, then it is the same as if it is alone (login problem) - but if you prepend it - that is, add it first:
append initrd=/boot/rootfsA.gz,/boot/rootfs4.gz,/boot/rootfs3.gz,/boot/rootfs2.gz,/boot/rootfs1.gz rw root=/dev/null noswap vga=normal lang=en kmap=us autologin
... then both the installed programs will be available (some persistence) - but the next filesystems will overwrite settings; and will create the live user tux
and proceed to autologin in that accound. So, it is not possible to save desktop icons and such - but at least the installed programs are there. Add lang=en kmap=us
to avoid the questions at startup (so it proceeds directly to autologin; EDIT - it throws a message on lang=en
; so it's probably lang=en_US
) - and I also tried to add noswap
to deactivate swap; but it still finds my local HD's swap, and does "Activating swap memory ..." (which I'd rather it didn't).
Anyways, nice it can be hacked in this way - though it is a bit of a pain having to generate a new image and copy it around, each time I change a single config line or so...
Hope this helps someone,
Cheers!