

It would be impertinent for me to tell you anything about post mounting possibilities. After an SFS is created all I usually do is mount it and make certain that /usr/share/.desktop is 'Puppy-friendly'. I've used PaDS many times to combine as many as 90 packages into an SFS.
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc()/puppylinuxinstall4-56a5aa943df78cf7728951ff.png)

But the successful SFS build will be in /root and looking at /root will show what package first balked the build process. Puppy Linuxs package manager, Puppy Package Manager, installs packages in PET (Puppy Enhanced Tarball) format by default but it also accepts packages from. PaDS also balks if any package is mis-formed, e.g. The work folder has to have a name DIFFERENT FROM any packages to be combined. The reason for this is that the debian postinstall scripts use a lot of debian specific tools and will likely work better if they are adapted to puppy. A more robust approach to is to extract the deb file using uextract and then build the pet using dir2pet. But I think that is only needed for 1.1.4 if you wanted to select packages from anywhere rather than placing all in a folder and/or if you wanted to create pets. petget +pkgname To install peget -pkgname To uninstall. xdotool -it will be in xenialpup's PPM- is a dependency. Both versions 1.1.4 and 1.1.7 will work under Xenialpup (both 32 and 64 bit).ġ.1.4 has an option to create pet packages via a GUI listed on the Utilities Menu. This means you’ll need to create a bootable CD, DVD, or USB drive containing the ISO file. To install Puppy Linux, you’ll first need to boot from ISO image you just downloaded. You download or copy/move all packages into a folder, then Right-Click the folder and Select "Combine to SFS". To install packages in a repository, open Puppy Package Manager and search for the desired package. Have you tried PaDS, viewtopic.php?p=6355#p6355?
