Mariposa Rescue Disk is a rescue system that can start from a USB stick. It helps you to troubleshoot, back up your data when your PC doesn’t boot anymore etc.
The system will start a console and log in as user “rescue”. The password is “rescue” as well. By typing “startx” you can enter the Window Manager. The system uses XFCE4.
Mariposa Rescue Disk comes with a lot of applications that serve to rescue your system: Gparted, parted, testdisk, ext3grep, ext4magic, extundelete, foremost, fsarchiver, gddrescue, Magicrescue, array-info, autopsy, bruteforce-luks, chkrootkit, ddrescueview, ddrutility, disktype, dmraid, myrescue, safecopy, sleuthkit, smartmontools, tinysshd tomb vsftpd and many more.

| Working state: | Active |
| Desktop: | Xfce |
| Init Software: | systemd |
| Package Management: | APT |
| Release Model: | Fixed |
| Platforms: | x86_64 |
| Home Page: | www.blueseal.eu/mariposa |
| Developer: | Blueseal |
This entry was suggested by a site visitor who completed the distro form.
| This article is part of our Big List of Active Linux Distributions. |
What's a Linux distribution ("distro")? |
| A distro provides the user with a desktop environment, preloaded applications, and ways to update and maintain the system. Each distro makes different choices, deciding which open source projects to install and provides custom written programs. They can have different philosophies. Some distros are intended for desktop computers, some for servers without a graphical interface, and others for special uses. Because Linux is an open source operating system, combinations of software vary between Linux distros. |
