Governor wrote: Sun Nov 20, 2022 7:50 pm
IMO, it a fatal flaw in the ISO file that is burned to the CD. The boot attempt generated the error message about not finding an .sfs file. The Knoppix CD booted fine with no changes made between switching CDs. I guess nobody will care about this issue because it seldom happens, but the flaw remains.
Anyway, I managed to make a thumb drive bootloader, but it remains to be seen if it works or not. I haven't time to try it now.
I tried to install a bootloader on my ext4 partition which has 433GB free, but it failed each time I tried to do it when I chose "this". I just chose "ISO" and pointed it to the boot CD for the source and it looks like it may have worked. However, when I try to use the GrubforDos to put the ext4 drive in the bootloader menu, it rejects the attempt. It says, "no supported file systems found".
Let me sum up what I'm hearing you describe:
1) The puppy installer appears to have copied the puppy system files from the iso to your 433GB ext4 partition. You think they are there, but maybe not sure. Did you mount the 433GB ext4 partition and take a look and see if those files are present?
2) You ran grub4dos to install the grub bootloader on the 433GB ext4 partition (which initially asks which drive you would like to install the grub files to) and in that screen you don't see your 433GB ext4 partition listed as a choice. Do I have that correct?
3) You booted your Knoppix CD, but the puppy CD would not boot until after you reformatted your hard drive. My instincts tell me that these two things were likely not related, a more probable cause might have been something as simple as a bad read from the CD. Especially because it's booting again, and as Mike and I have mentioned, the CD boot doesn't need anything related to the hard drive in order to boot
4) You have a USB thumb drive with puppy installed along with a grub bootloader that has not been booted yet.
If I have all that correct, I can give you my thoughts as to what I might do next.
1) Try and boot from USB
2) If the USB boot is successful, mount your 433GB hard drive and tell me what you see in terms of puppy files or lack thereof. Below is what's in my puppy install directory, yours won't contain the devx.sfs, the hplip.sfs, the tree.sfs, the kdenlive.sfs, or the two pupsave directories:

3) Tell me what you did in the install process both for the USB drive and for the 433GB drive. Did you choose Frugal Install? If you find using the frugal installer confusing I can explain how to do a manual install. It's as easy as simply copying the above files to a directory on the install drive and running grub4dos to install a bootloader.