I’ve repurposed a 32 GB M.2 SATA SSD as a bootable “USB stick” and I’m putting useful tools on it. So far I’ve got memtest, seatools, gparted live, system rescue, clonezilla, and a live install iso of the distro installed on my PC. What other great bootable tools am I sleeping on?

  • IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz
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    11 months ago

    Not spesifically a tool to put on a USB stick, but Ventoy is worth checking. I’ve had a bit mixed results with it on older hardware but when it works it’s pretty easy to manage your carry-on-tools.

  • BuckShot@beehaw.org
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    11 months ago

    UNetbootin could be cool, it’ll provide access to mamy iso’s instead of just one.

    Distro’s supported:

    - Ubuntu
    - Kubuntu
    - Xubuntu
    - Lubuntu
    - Debian
    - openSUSE
    - Arch Linux
    - Damn Small Linux
    - SliTaz
    - Linux Mint
    - Zenwalk
    - Slax
    - Elive
    - CentOS
    - FreeBSD
    - NetBSD
    - 3CX
    - Fedora
    - PCLinuxOS
    - Sabayon Linux
    - Gentoo
    - MEPIS
    - LinuxConsole
    - Frugalware Linux
    - xPUD
    - Puppy Linux
    

    It can be used to load various system utilities too, such as:

    - Parted Magic
    - SystemRescueCD
    - Super Grub Disk
    - Dr.Web Antivirus
    - F-Secure Rescue CD
    - Kaspersky Rescue Disk
    - Backtrack
    - Ophcrack
    - NTPasswd
    - Gujin
    - Smart Boot Manager
    - FreeDOS
    
  • disheveledWallaby@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    Testdisk, clamxTK, rkhunter or chkrootkit, mobile verification toolkit, lshw, time shift maybe deja-dup.

    I think your idea is a good one. Like a linux Swiss Army knife. You can have lots of tools that you don’t need all the time but might be handy in a pinch. Especially if you don’t have internet.

    • TarquinNimrod@sh.itjust.works
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      11 months ago

      Testdisk is great. I recently cleaned a drive with diskpart and after the initial 100bpm “oh removed, wrong drive” moment, I fixed the partition structure with testdisk. Took a while, but pretty simple and easy to use.