Remaster vs Woofy, what's the difference?
Remaster vs Woofy, what's the difference?
hi i am wondering what the difference is between the puppy remaster tool and woofy.
puppy remaster cd comes built in to puppy os.
woofy can be found here. http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=57037
what are the differences between them, the pros and cons of each?
feel free to share how you find them yourself. and point to any revelent post you know about in the forum or wikka about either.
edit here is a good information about remastering tool http://pupweb.org/wikka/remaster
puppy remaster cd comes built in to puppy os.
woofy can be found here. http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=57037
what are the differences between them, the pros and cons of each?
feel free to share how you find them yourself. and point to any revelent post you know about in the forum or wikka about either.
edit here is a good information about remastering tool http://pupweb.org/wikka/remaster
An Explanation of Remaster and Woofy in Puppy Linux
Remasterpup (the standard remaster tool)
This builds a new .iso image of the the current install in its current state.
There are some options to leave some parts of the filesystem 'pristine'.
'Pristine' means none of your changes make it into the new ISO.
There are also some options to exclude hardware specific changes, mostly in /etc.
Only shinobars updated version supports:
- remaster with or without a zdrv (contains kernel drivers)
- Grub as a boot loader on the ISO
- Joilet filesystems on the ISO (for long filenames)
You can choose to include the hardware specific changes, so the new ISO only boots on the PC on which it was created.
This is not recommended.
The only real problem is that the contents of /etc and /root must be added manually during the remaster process, so that customisations within that folder are kept in the new ISO. Some things cannot be copied, if you want to boot on different PCs.
This has the added problem of users forgetting not to include the 'cache' contents of the /root/.mozilla folder, leaving their browsing history and even their passwords in the new ISO, easily available in the browser!
Woofy (by sc0ttman)
Woofy can remaster any ISO, not only the Puppy that is currently booted.
Woofy should support almost all versions of Puppy, even if it is different from the one you are running.
Woofy does not include any customisations made to the current system, instead:
- you must supply the bootable Puppy Linux .iso file that you want to remaster
- you can supply a dir containing the packages you want to add (supports pet, sfs, tar.gz, deb, rpm, txz, xz)
- you can supply a list of files to be deleted from the remastered filesystem
- you can edit boot options and themes
- you cannot make an ISO that is specific to your hardware
- Grub and isolinux boot managers are supported
- Joliet is supported
- edit the initrd.gz file and its contents
- remaster with or without a zdrv
The only real problem with Woofy is you have to give the full path to file that you want deleted - it will not automagically delete what you want.. There are tips on the Woofy thread on how to make the list.
Woofy: http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=57037
Both Woofy and Remasterpup allow you to:
- edit boot options, such as pkeys and pfix options
- manually edit the filesystem before the new SFS file is created
- create a bootable ISO of the remastered Puppy
Edit-SFS - the simplest alternative
Get it here: http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... 127#348127
This is a simple tool that lets you edit the contents of an SFS file.
This is great for making simple tweaks and additions in the SFS, when other files, such as initrd.gz, are not affected.
You can even edit the SFS that is booted, replace it with the new one,
then simply reboot to see all your changes included as default.
Please note, Woofy should not be confused with Woof.
'Woof', by Barry K, is the advanced Puppy Linux build tool, which builds an entirely new Puppy Linux from source code, or from another distros packages. Barry Ks 'Woof' is not a remaster tool.
This builds a new .iso image of the the current install in its current state.
There are some options to leave some parts of the filesystem 'pristine'.
'Pristine' means none of your changes make it into the new ISO.
There are also some options to exclude hardware specific changes, mostly in /etc.
Only shinobars updated version supports:
- remaster with or without a zdrv (contains kernel drivers)
- Grub as a boot loader on the ISO
- Joilet filesystems on the ISO (for long filenames)
You can choose to include the hardware specific changes, so the new ISO only boots on the PC on which it was created.
This is not recommended.
The only real problem is that the contents of /etc and /root must be added manually during the remaster process, so that customisations within that folder are kept in the new ISO. Some things cannot be copied, if you want to boot on different PCs.
This has the added problem of users forgetting not to include the 'cache' contents of the /root/.mozilla folder, leaving their browsing history and even their passwords in the new ISO, easily available in the browser!
Woofy (by sc0ttman)
Woofy can remaster any ISO, not only the Puppy that is currently booted.
Woofy should support almost all versions of Puppy, even if it is different from the one you are running.
Woofy does not include any customisations made to the current system, instead:
- you must supply the bootable Puppy Linux .iso file that you want to remaster
- you can supply a dir containing the packages you want to add (supports pet, sfs, tar.gz, deb, rpm, txz, xz)
- you can supply a list of files to be deleted from the remastered filesystem
- you can edit boot options and themes
- you cannot make an ISO that is specific to your hardware
- Grub and isolinux boot managers are supported
- Joliet is supported
- edit the initrd.gz file and its contents
- remaster with or without a zdrv
The only real problem with Woofy is you have to give the full path to file that you want deleted - it will not automagically delete what you want.. There are tips on the Woofy thread on how to make the list.
Woofy: http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=57037
Both Woofy and Remasterpup allow you to:
- edit boot options, such as pkeys and pfix options
- manually edit the filesystem before the new SFS file is created
- create a bootable ISO of the remastered Puppy
Edit-SFS - the simplest alternative
Get it here: http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... 127#348127
This is a simple tool that lets you edit the contents of an SFS file.
This is great for making simple tweaks and additions in the SFS, when other files, such as initrd.gz, are not affected.
You can even edit the SFS that is booted, replace it with the new one,
then simply reboot to see all your changes included as default.
Please note, Woofy should not be confused with Woof.
'Woof', by Barry K, is the advanced Puppy Linux build tool, which builds an entirely new Puppy Linux from source code, or from another distros packages. Barry Ks 'Woof' is not a remaster tool.
Last edited by sc0ttman on Wed 09 Jan 2013, 20:25, edited 12 times in total.
[b][url=https://bit.ly/2KjtxoD]Pkg[/url], [url=https://bit.ly/2U6dzxV]mdsh[/url], [url=https://bit.ly/2G49OE8]Woofy[/url], [url=http://goo.gl/bzBU1]Akita[/url], [url=http://goo.gl/SO5ug]VLC-GTK[/url], [url=https://tiny.cc/c2hnfz]Search[/url][/b]
That's a brilliant intro and tutorial into puppy remastering scOttman. Thank you!
[url=http://pupsearch.weebly.com/][img]http://pupsearch.weebly.com/uploads/7/4/6/4/7464374/125791.gif[/img][/url]
[url=https://startpage.com/do/search?q=host%3Awww.murga-linux.com%2F][img]http://i.imgur.com/XJ9Tqc7.png[/img][/url]
[url=https://startpage.com/do/search?q=host%3Awww.murga-linux.com%2F][img]http://i.imgur.com/XJ9Tqc7.png[/img][/url]
You also need to copy stuff from /etc when remastering.The only real problem is that the contents of /root must be added manually during the remaster process, so that customisations within that folder are kept in the new ISO.
A third option is to manually edit the main.sfs .This works great but it's slow and can get complex .
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@sc0ttman
Thanks, sc0ttman! So far I've only remastered, but now I'm going to try Woofy.
True on both points, forgot about that, I'll update the main post.runtt21 wrote:You also need to copy stuff from /etc when remastering.The only real problem is that the contents of /root must be added manually during the remaster process, so that customisations within that folder are kept in the new ISO.
A third option is to manually edit the main.sfs .This works great but it's slow and can get complex .
[b][url=https://bit.ly/2KjtxoD]Pkg[/url], [url=https://bit.ly/2U6dzxV]mdsh[/url], [url=https://bit.ly/2G49OE8]Woofy[/url], [url=http://goo.gl/bzBU1]Akita[/url], [url=http://goo.gl/SO5ug]VLC-GTK[/url], [url=https://tiny.cc/c2hnfz]Search[/url][/b]
Re: An Explanation of Remaster and Woofy in Puppy Linux
this is excellent.. where can i get the edit-sfs you mentionedsc0ttman wrote:Remasterpup (the standard remaster tool)
This builds a new .iso image of the the current install in its current state.
There are some options to leave some parts of the filesystem 'pristine'.
'Pristine' means none of your changes make it into the new ISO.
There are also some options to exclude hardware specific changes, mostly in /etc.
Only shinobars updated version supports:
- remaster with or without a zdrv (contains kernel drivers)
- Grub as a boot loader on the ISO
- Joilet filesystems on the ISO (for long filenames)
You can choose to include the hardware specific changes, so the new ISO only boots on the PC on which it was created.
This is not recommended.
The only real problem is that the contents of /etc and /root must be added manually during the remaster process, so that customisations within that folder are kept in the new ISO. Some things cannot be copied, if you want to boot on different PCs.
This has the added problem of users forgetting not to include the 'cache' contents of the /root/.mozilla folder, leaving their browsing history and even their passwords in the new ISO, easily available in the browser!
Woofy
Woofy can remaster any ISO, not only the Puppy that is currently booted.
Woofy should support almost all versions of Puppy, even if it is different from the one you are running.
Woofy does not include any customisations made to the current system, instead:
- you must supply the bootable Puppy Linux .iso file that you want to remaster
- you can supply a dir containing the packages you want to add (supports pet, sfs, tar.gz, deb, rpm, txz, xz)
- you can supply a list of files to be deleted from the remastered filesystem
- you can edit boot options and themes
- you cannot make an ISO that is specific to your hardware
- Grub and isolinux boot managers are supported
- Joliet is supported
- edit the initrd.gz file and its contents
- remaster with or without a zdrv
The only real problem with Woofy is you have to give the full path to file that you want deleted - it will not automagically delete what you want.. There are tips on the Woofy thread on how to make the list.
Woofy: http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=57037
Both Woofy and Remasterpup allow you to:
- edit boot options, such as pkeys and pfix options
- manually edit the filesystem before the new SFS file is created
- create a bootable ISO of the remastered Puppy
Edit-SFS
This is a simple tool that lets you edit the contents of an SFS file.
This is great for making simple tweaks and additions in the SFS, when other files, such as initrd.gz, are not affected.
You can even edit the SFS that is booted, replace it with the new one,
then simply reboot to see all your changes included as default.
Please note, Woofy should not be confused with Woof.
'Woof', by Barry K, is the advanced Puppy Linux build tool, which builds an entirely new Puppy Linux from source code, or from another distros packages. Barry Ks 'Woof' is not a remaster tool.
Re: An Explanation of Remaster and Woofy in Puppy Linux
updated my first post, now contains link to edit-sfs 2.1HiDeHo wrote:this is excellent.. where can i get the edit-sfs you mentioned
[b][url=https://bit.ly/2KjtxoD]Pkg[/url], [url=https://bit.ly/2U6dzxV]mdsh[/url], [url=https://bit.ly/2G49OE8]Woofy[/url], [url=http://goo.gl/bzBU1]Akita[/url], [url=http://goo.gl/SO5ug]VLC-GTK[/url], [url=https://tiny.cc/c2hnfz]Search[/url][/b]
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Woofy is what we need
"I'd like to see woofy able to be updated for modern pups, it is a wonderful remastering tool." the same opinion.. That is what we need.. Just some light impovments