I have a 128 GB USB key on which I would like to install Ubuntu 16.04.3 as a Persistent LiveUSB.
I have tried three different solutions, and run into difficulties each time:
- LiveLinux on Windows 10 limits the size of the persistent sector to 4 GB, and, worse, the USB key is not recognized as a bootable drive
- mkusb decided that Zenity would not work in the environment provided by my (non-persistent) LiveUSB key, and when I tried to use version 11 instead, it failed to mount the USB key after installation.
Are there any other solutions available? Or is there a step-by-step Idiot's Guide that will help me troubleshoot one of the above methods, so that I can coax it into working for me?
Or is it simply that 128 GB is too big?
Ideally, I would like to have a partition on the USB key which I can use for copying files to and from Windows machines, but right now, I will settle for anything that allows me to keep my preferred key board layout and other personal settings from one startup to the next.
UPDATE: I have successfully installed a Persistent LiveUSB version of Ubuntu on an 8 GB USB key using mkusb. First, I had to create a non-persistent version using Ubuntu 16.04.3, where mkusb was able to launch Zenity. * The built-in Startup Disk Creator did create a working LiveUSB key, but it simply has a button for Make Startup Disk which seems to provide no persistence.