geo_c wrote: ↑Sat Dec 10, 2022 9:32 pmDon't put savefiles on the hard drive.
Think about it. A CD iso is designed to boot a complete system from a CD, but there are no pupsave files on the CD, so the boot routine as defined in the stanzas of the grub menu look for a savefile to load. If it finds one I believe it will automatically load it. But if there are two, it should give you a choice.
If your goal is to boot from USB, then there is no reason to install to the hard drive. Instead install to USB. If your goal is to boot from the hard drive, then install to the hard drive. You can install to both, and the bios boot order will come into play, but depending on the stanzas in grub, it may find save files in more than one drive. In fact grub on a USB thumb drive can be configured to boot pups from any other drive, and many of us use that technique to dual boot with windows.
The easiest way to run a puppy is install it to the target drive and save the pupsave on the same partition, same directory as the install. It will find the pupsave every time that way.
I was going to step you through booting from a clean CD, setting up an install on the internal hard drive, and creating a save folder. From that point you could do all kinds of other installation simply by plugging in drives.
I would like to both have a USB boot and a harddrive boot. I installed Puppy to the harddrive using Frugal Install. I tried using GRUB, but it says "no supported files systems found"
It is no problem for me, if you can give me specific instruction, I can follow, please do. Did I do something wrong by using Frugal install?