A live CD, live DVD, or live disc
is a complete bootable computer installation including operating system
which runs in a computer's memory, rather than loading from a hard disk
drive; the CD itself is read-only. It allows users to run an operating
system
for any purpose without installing it or making any changes to the
computer's configuration. Live CDs can run on a computer without
secondary storage, such as a hard disk drive, or with a corrupted hard
disk drive or file system, allowing data recovery. A live ISO is an ISO
image
of a Live CD which can be used in virtual machine environments, mounted
as if it were a CD/DVD and used as the virtual machine's boot CD. Live
CDs, ISOs, and images usually include an operating system available
without charge or restrictive licence such as Linux, rather than a
commercial one such as Microsoft Windows, for legal rather than
technical reasons.
The functionality of a live CD is also available with a bootable live
USB flash drive, or even an external USB drive. These may have the added
functionality of writing changes on the bootable medium. Write-locked
Live SD WORM systems are the direct solid-state
counterpart to live CDs, and can be booted natively in a media card
slot or by using a USB adapter. Write-locked Live SD systems avoid
excessive write cycles or corruption by ill-conditioned software, such
as malware.
While a live
CD typically does not alter any operating system or
files already installed on a computer's secondary storage (such as hard
disk drives), many live CDs include software mechanisms and utilities
for altering the host computer's data stores, including installation of
an operating system. This is important for the system management aspect
of live CDs, which can be useful for removing malware, for disk imaging,
and for system recovery.
Unless such software is used, at the end of a live CD session the
computer remains as it was before. The live system is able to run
without permanent installation by placing the files that normally would
be stored on a hard drive into RAM, typically in a RAM disk. The
computer must have sufficient RAM both to store these files and maintain
normal operation.
Here we can create virtual operating systems like
Windows XP
Windows 7
Windows 8
Puppy LINUX
Slax LINUX
Ophcrack Live CD
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