Hello everyone,
I installed Kubuntu 15.10 on a USB stick, with YUMI-multiboot. After I tried to update, I got a notification that I was out of memory. After a few minutes of no apparent progress, I got a message that the updates failed and my configuration might be broken. Which it turned out to be, I forced a reboot with the reset button on my computer, and the computer booted into a blank screen, only with the default background picture. The mouse cursor was visible, and I could move the mouse, but that was it. No GUI, besides that.
So I have a few questions, which hopefully somebody can answer.
I had planned to use these 2 GB of persistence mostly to install updates and my own files. The USB flash drive I'm using is 16GB, but I intend to install a few more Linux distros on it, for testing purposes mostly. I really like the KDE desktop, but these beginning obstacles are quite disheartening. Besides, the environment feels slow and unresponsive. I know that a USB live install is not as fast as from the hard disk, but other distros, like Linux Mint Cinnamon and Xubuntu 15.10 XFCE, are fast and responsive, under the same circumstances (a live USB install.)
I installed Kubuntu 15.10 on a USB stick, with YUMI-multiboot. After I tried to update, I got a notification that I was out of memory. After a few minutes of no apparent progress, I got a message that the updates failed and my configuration might be broken. Which it turned out to be, I forced a reboot with the reset button on my computer, and the computer booted into a blank screen, only with the default background picture. The mouse cursor was visible, and I could move the mouse, but that was it. No GUI, besides that.
So I have a few questions, which hopefully somebody can answer.
- Doesn't Kubuntu save a last known good configuration and revert to it, in case of failed updates?
- Another question is - how much memory does this thing need to gobble up? I gave it 2GB of persistence in YUMI, thought it would be enough, as so many are saying Linux is so light on resources. The system had about 1.2 GiB free at the beginning, but after I ran the updates and Firefox, it quickly reduced to about 200 MiB, then to zero. That was when the freeze came about, not surprisingly maybe, as the system had run out of memory to work in.
- Besides, the system log monitor showed that Kubuntu didn't touch my RAM, of which I have 8GB. Isn't the OS configured to utilize RAM, even when running in USB live mode?
- Or is this a failure of YUMI-multiboot?
- Does anyone know if it's possible to configure a live Linux, installed by YUMI, to use RAM?
I had planned to use these 2 GB of persistence mostly to install updates and my own files. The USB flash drive I'm using is 16GB, but I intend to install a few more Linux distros on it, for testing purposes mostly. I really like the KDE desktop, but these beginning obstacles are quite disheartening. Besides, the environment feels slow and unresponsive. I know that a USB live install is not as fast as from the hard disk, but other distros, like Linux Mint Cinnamon and Xubuntu 15.10 XFCE, are fast and responsive, under the same circumstances (a live USB install.)
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