I did have some issues with the settings in some of my past versions, which did not turn the automounting off properly. HDDLiveCD is supposed to have all automounting turned off in the settings. HDDLiveCD is currently based on Lubuntu 14.04. Oh, to complete myself, USB drives get auto-mounted. But when working only through a terminal, or just starting the machine and then hddsuperclone, nothing is mounted. The behaviour I see here is like you describe, that it will mount only if I click in the drives in the file manager. Any standard live CD will just auto mount like the OS flavor it is based your HDDLiveCd is Ubuntu-based, isn´t it ? I´m somewhat sure I didn´t configure anything in Ubuntu to prevent auto-mounting ( 12.04, 14.04 ). HDDLiveCD (for HDDSuperClone) has the settings set to not auto mount, but it is possible to click on the device in the file manager to mount it. That is good if you are comfortable with always using terminal commands to do things. SystemRescueCD will almost certainly not do any sort of auto mounting, and in fact will require you to perform terminal commands to mount anything. If you choose to go with a live CD, then you would want a special one that does not auto mount. So if you want to install it, look up how to disable automatic mounting for your choice of Linux (it will be different between them). Every standard flavor of Linux will have auto mount turned on, but most should have a way to turn it off in the settings. But if you plan on repeated work then you would want to install some version of Linux. If you just want to use it for a one time recovery, or just occasionally, you may want to use a live CD. It is our favorite system recovery CD.It would depend on what you planning to do. Overall, we strongly recommend SystemRescueCd for all your system administration, system recovery, data recovery, and disk partitioning tasks. Default applications include the Midori web browser, emelFM2 twin-panel file manager, Xfburn CD/DVD writing utility, Geany IDE (Integrated Development Environment), SpaceFM file manager, ISO Master, ePDFViewer PDF viewer, Midnight Commander file manager, and much more. The distribution uses the latest stable version of the lightweight Xfce desktop environment, and it will always open a terminal emulator window every time the session starts. After booting the live media, you will be dropped to a shell prompt, where you’ll need to type the startx command in order to access the graphical environment. ![]() Another interesting feature is the ability to boot from the first or the second hard disk. Alternative kernels are also provided, just in case the standard ones don’t work as expected. Supports 32-bit and 64-bit computersĪdditionally, even if the SystemRescueCd ISO image has been designed for 32-bit architectures, users will be able to boot the system into both 64-bit and 32-bit rescue modes. SystemRescueCd provides users with an advanced boot menu, which can be used to boot the live environment in different ways, boot the currently installed operating system, or run various handy system tools (Memtest86+, NTPASSWD, SGD, FreeDOS, Netboot, HDT, AIDA, GAG, DBAN and MHDD). Several file systems utilities will help system administrators to deal with any type of filesystem task, including format, resize, move, and copy, on both Linux and Microsoft Windows operating systems. ![]() It comes with a wide range of system utilities, such as GNU Parted, GParted and partimage for disk partitioning tasks, TestDisk and GNU ddrescue for recovering lost partitions and restoring the bootable state of your boot partition. The best usage example of the SystemRescueCd distribution is data rescue after a serious system crash, when you computer won't boot anymore. ![]() SystemRescueCd is an open source Linux operating system designed for system administrators and Linux/UNIX enthusiasts who are looking for a system rescue and general system administration tool.
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