Live Raizo presents you with a prompt and you are unable to login. What little documentation exist says the password for 'user' is 'user' and the password for 'root' is 'root'. Neither password works. So I could never gain access to this distro.
Their instructions:
Of Live-Raizo
• The password of user is user. You must use "sudo" (or "sudo su")
to start commands as root
• At boot, all detected networks interfaces are activated (but not
configured), and they will stay activated even if you use ifdown. If
you want shutdown a network interface (enp0s0, for example), you
must do : "sudo ifconfig enp0s0 down".
• At boot, a bridge interface, named virbr0, is created : useful if you
want to do communicate your virtual network with "Live Raizo"
• Before install Debian Package, you must do : "sudo apt update"
• X starts automatically
fast-battery if battery detected
Can't give an higher vote as I barely touched all its features. Am I lazy? No!
The fact is that Liveraizo has so much tools that newbies like me will have a lot to learn before fully use it... dynamips, qemu, gns3 are network emulators. That's the ground where Liveraizo really shines.
Live Raizo presents you with a prompt and you are unable to login. What little documentation exist says the password for 'user' is 'user' and the password for 'root' is 'root'. Neither password works. So I could never gain access to this distro.
Their instructions:
Of Live-Raizo
• The password of user is user. You must use "sudo" (or "sudo su")
to start commands as root
• At boot, all detected networks interfaces are activated (but not
configured), and they will stay activated even if you use ifdown. If
you want shutdown a network interface (enp0s0, for example), you
must do : "sudo ifconfig enp0s0 down".
• At boot, a bridge interface, named virbr0, is created : useful if you
want to do communicate your virtual network with "Live Raizo"
• Before install Debian Package, you must do : "sudo apt update"
• X starts automatically
fast-battery if battery detected
Can't give an higher vote as I barely touched all its features. Am I lazy? No!
The fact is that Liveraizo has so much tools that newbies like me will have a lot to learn before fully use it... dynamips, qemu, gns3 are network emulators. That's the ground where Liveraizo really shines.
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