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Knoppix

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Knoppix is a computer operating system which can be used as a LiveCD. It is a Debian based Linux distribution, developed by Linux consultant Klaus Knopper.

When repairing systems with non-booting hard drives, Knoppix is a much more comfortable environment than the previous solution of boot floppies, thanks to the complete graphical environment and networking.

Although Knoppix is primarily designed to be used as a live CD, it can also be installed on a hard disk like a typical operating system.

There are two main editions of Knoppix: the traditional Compact Disc edition and the DVD (4.7 gigabytes) "Maxi" edition. Each of these main editions have two language-specific editions. One language is English and the other is German.

When starting a program it is loaded from the Optical disk and decompressed into a RAM drive. The decompression is transparent and on-the-fly.

Knoppix mostly consists of free software, but also includes proprietary software.

Usage

There are several possible uses of the Knoppix live CD:

Contents

Knoppix start-up process
Enlarge
Knoppix start-up process

More than 1000 software packages are included on the CD edition and more than 2600 are included on the DVD edition. Up to 9 gigabytes can be stored on the DVD in compressed form. These packages include:

Requirements

There are some requirements for a computer to be able to run Knoppix, which include:

Saving changes in the environment

Prior to Knoppix 3.8.1, any documents or settings a user created would disappear upon reboot. This lack of permanence made it necessary to save documents explicitly to a hard drive partition, over the network, or to some removable medium, such as a USB thumbdrive.

It was also possible to set up a "persistent home directory", wherein any documents or settings written to the user's home directory would automatically be redirected to a hard drive or removable medium, which could be automatically mounted on bootup. What is stored there physically is a file called knoppix.img. The file is used to simulate a file system into which files are written for later use. This is transparent for the user. What the user perceives is that it is possible to write files to the home directory.

Since Knoppix 3.8.1, a UnionFS filesystem transparently saves any new or changed files to a writable filesystem - one which can reside either in memory (ramdisk) or on a hard disk, USB thumbdrive, etc.

This means that the user can modify the software installed on the Knoppix system, such as by using APT to install or update software. Additionally, Knoppix users can employ klik. The user can go to a web site and install and run programs simply by clicking on hyperlinks.

By carrying a Knoppix CD and a USB thumbdrive, a user can have the same environment, programs, settings, and data available on any computer.

Boot Options

When using Knoppix as a live CD, boot options, also known as cheat codes, can be used to override a default setting or automatic hardware detection when it fails. For example, the user may wish to boot into a plain console, or proceed without SCSI support. For this, Knoppix allows the user to enter one or more cheat codes at the prompt before booting. If the user doesn't enter a cheat code, or if no key is pressed before the timeout, Knoppix will boot with its default options. For example, to set the language to French rather than the default, one would type:

knoppix lang=fr

Popularity

Although there is no data to base this claim on, Knoppix is believed to be the most popular LiveCD. There are factors that contribute to the popularity of Knoppix:

Drawbacks

Knoppix has some important drawbacks:

Versions

Starting from version 4.0, Knoppix has been split into a DVD "maxi" edition (with over 9GB of software), and a CD "light" edition, both developed in parallel. The first release of Knoppix 5.0 was available to visitors of CeBIT in DVD form. Public editions of 5.0 are now available.


| Knoppix version
| Release date
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 3.1
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 19 January2003
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 3.2
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 26 July2003
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 3.3
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 16 February2004
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 3.4
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 17 May2004
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 3.6
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 16 August2004
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 3.7
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 9 December2004
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 3.8.2
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 12 May2005
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 3.9
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 1 June2005
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 4.0
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 22 June2005
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 4.0 updated
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 16 August2005
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 4.0.2
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 23 September2005
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 5.0
| style="background:#ccccff;" | 25 February2006
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 5.0.1
| style="background:#dddddd;" | 2 June2006

Variations

See also

  1. redirect[[Template:Portal]]

Further reading

[[wikibooks:|Wikibooks ]] has more about this subject:
[[wikibooks::Knowing Knoppix|Knowing Knoppix]]

External links

News articles

[ edit]
Linux distributions
CentOS | Debian | Fedora | Gentoo | Knoppix | Mandriva | MEPIS | Red Hat Enterprise | Slackware | SUSE | Ubuntu | more…

 


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