How do I make a live USB on Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS (Bionic Beaver)? [duplicate]What is the proper way of creating installation media from Ubuntu iso?Install Wine on Ubuntu 13.04 running from a Live USB?Live USB ubuntu can only boot when deleting casper fileLive usb problemLive USB wifi problemCreate a USB bootable Windows 8.1 from Ubuntu live USB
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How do I make a live USB on Ubuntu 18.04.2 LTS (Bionic Beaver)? [duplicate]
What is the proper way of creating installation media from Ubuntu iso?Install Wine on Ubuntu 13.04 running from a Live USB?Live USB ubuntu can only boot when deleting casper fileLive usb problemLive USB wifi problemCreate a USB bootable Windows 8.1 from Ubuntu live USB
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This question already has an answer here:
What is the proper way of creating installation media from Ubuntu iso?
6 answers
I have tried everything, and it just trous put errors. How can I fix it?
live-usb mkusb
marked as duplicate by karel, Kulfy, waltinator, mikewhatever, Byte Commander♦ Jun 9 at 10:39
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment
|
This question already has an answer here:
What is the proper way of creating installation media from Ubuntu iso?
6 answers
I have tried everything, and it just trous put errors. How can I fix it?
live-usb mkusb
marked as duplicate by karel, Kulfy, waltinator, mikewhatever, Byte Commander♦ Jun 9 at 10:39
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
1
Also: UEFI only USB key, just extract ISO ( 7 zip or similar) to FAT32 formatted flash drive partition & set boot flag. askubuntu.com/questions/395879/… and: help.ubuntu.com/community/mkusb or wiki.ubuntu.com/Win32DiskImager/iso2usb
– oldfred
Jun 8 at 18:23
3
What do you mean by "it just trous put errors" (it seems incomprehensible)? Respond by editing your question, not here in comments.
– Peter Mortensen
Jun 8 at 19:24
2
It could also be great that you give more details on what you have tried. "I have tried everything" sounds a bit vague :)
– FloT
Jun 8 at 20:11
add a comment
|
This question already has an answer here:
What is the proper way of creating installation media from Ubuntu iso?
6 answers
I have tried everything, and it just trous put errors. How can I fix it?
live-usb mkusb
This question already has an answer here:
What is the proper way of creating installation media from Ubuntu iso?
6 answers
I have tried everything, and it just trous put errors. How can I fix it?
This question already has an answer here:
What is the proper way of creating installation media from Ubuntu iso?
6 answers
live-usb mkusb
live-usb mkusb
edited Jun 8 at 21:30
Peter Mortensen
1,0252 gold badges11 silver badges17 bronze badges
1,0252 gold badges11 silver badges17 bronze badges
asked Jun 8 at 17:25
Andre van der MerweAndre van der Merwe
11 bronze badge
11 bronze badge
marked as duplicate by karel, Kulfy, waltinator, mikewhatever, Byte Commander♦ Jun 9 at 10:39
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by karel, Kulfy, waltinator, mikewhatever, Byte Commander♦ Jun 9 at 10:39
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by karel, Kulfy, waltinator, mikewhatever, Byte Commander♦ Jun 9 at 10:39
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
1
Also: UEFI only USB key, just extract ISO ( 7 zip or similar) to FAT32 formatted flash drive partition & set boot flag. askubuntu.com/questions/395879/… and: help.ubuntu.com/community/mkusb or wiki.ubuntu.com/Win32DiskImager/iso2usb
– oldfred
Jun 8 at 18:23
3
What do you mean by "it just trous put errors" (it seems incomprehensible)? Respond by editing your question, not here in comments.
– Peter Mortensen
Jun 8 at 19:24
2
It could also be great that you give more details on what you have tried. "I have tried everything" sounds a bit vague :)
– FloT
Jun 8 at 20:11
add a comment
|
1
Also: UEFI only USB key, just extract ISO ( 7 zip or similar) to FAT32 formatted flash drive partition & set boot flag. askubuntu.com/questions/395879/… and: help.ubuntu.com/community/mkusb or wiki.ubuntu.com/Win32DiskImager/iso2usb
– oldfred
Jun 8 at 18:23
3
What do you mean by "it just trous put errors" (it seems incomprehensible)? Respond by editing your question, not here in comments.
– Peter Mortensen
Jun 8 at 19:24
2
It could also be great that you give more details on what you have tried. "I have tried everything" sounds a bit vague :)
– FloT
Jun 8 at 20:11
1
1
Also: UEFI only USB key, just extract ISO ( 7 zip or similar) to FAT32 formatted flash drive partition & set boot flag. askubuntu.com/questions/395879/… and: help.ubuntu.com/community/mkusb or wiki.ubuntu.com/Win32DiskImager/iso2usb
– oldfred
Jun 8 at 18:23
Also: UEFI only USB key, just extract ISO ( 7 zip or similar) to FAT32 formatted flash drive partition & set boot flag. askubuntu.com/questions/395879/… and: help.ubuntu.com/community/mkusb or wiki.ubuntu.com/Win32DiskImager/iso2usb
– oldfred
Jun 8 at 18:23
3
3
What do you mean by "it just trous put errors" (it seems incomprehensible)? Respond by editing your question, not here in comments.
– Peter Mortensen
Jun 8 at 19:24
What do you mean by "it just trous put errors" (it seems incomprehensible)? Respond by editing your question, not here in comments.
– Peter Mortensen
Jun 8 at 19:24
2
2
It could also be great that you give more details on what you have tried. "I have tried everything" sounds a bit vague :)
– FloT
Jun 8 at 20:11
It could also be great that you give more details on what you have tried. "I have tried everything" sounds a bit vague :)
– FloT
Jun 8 at 20:11
add a comment
|
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
This is quite easy, you can use the dd
command in the terminal.
dd
is used to create exact copies of files/partitions/drives into another file/partition/drive, for example:
You could create a backup (copy) of an entire drive into a file called sda.backup with the next command
sudo dd if=/dev/sda of=sda.backup
But in your case, you should do the opposite, restore the image (OS-Name.iso) into a drive (the USB flash drive), to do so you should use a command like this one:
sudo dd if=/path/to/the/image/OS.iso of=/dev/sdX
The X means the letter of the drive, you can find out with the next command (although it's usually b):
sudo fdisk -l
add a comment
|
You could also add status=progress
since it takes a while to copy the iso
sudo dd if=file.iso of=/dev/<usb drive> status=progress
if you dont know where is your usb drive, use the lsblk
command in terminal
add a comment
|
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This is quite easy, you can use the dd
command in the terminal.
dd
is used to create exact copies of files/partitions/drives into another file/partition/drive, for example:
You could create a backup (copy) of an entire drive into a file called sda.backup with the next command
sudo dd if=/dev/sda of=sda.backup
But in your case, you should do the opposite, restore the image (OS-Name.iso) into a drive (the USB flash drive), to do so you should use a command like this one:
sudo dd if=/path/to/the/image/OS.iso of=/dev/sdX
The X means the letter of the drive, you can find out with the next command (although it's usually b):
sudo fdisk -l
add a comment
|
This is quite easy, you can use the dd
command in the terminal.
dd
is used to create exact copies of files/partitions/drives into another file/partition/drive, for example:
You could create a backup (copy) of an entire drive into a file called sda.backup with the next command
sudo dd if=/dev/sda of=sda.backup
But in your case, you should do the opposite, restore the image (OS-Name.iso) into a drive (the USB flash drive), to do so you should use a command like this one:
sudo dd if=/path/to/the/image/OS.iso of=/dev/sdX
The X means the letter of the drive, you can find out with the next command (although it's usually b):
sudo fdisk -l
add a comment
|
This is quite easy, you can use the dd
command in the terminal.
dd
is used to create exact copies of files/partitions/drives into another file/partition/drive, for example:
You could create a backup (copy) of an entire drive into a file called sda.backup with the next command
sudo dd if=/dev/sda of=sda.backup
But in your case, you should do the opposite, restore the image (OS-Name.iso) into a drive (the USB flash drive), to do so you should use a command like this one:
sudo dd if=/path/to/the/image/OS.iso of=/dev/sdX
The X means the letter of the drive, you can find out with the next command (although it's usually b):
sudo fdisk -l
This is quite easy, you can use the dd
command in the terminal.
dd
is used to create exact copies of files/partitions/drives into another file/partition/drive, for example:
You could create a backup (copy) of an entire drive into a file called sda.backup with the next command
sudo dd if=/dev/sda of=sda.backup
But in your case, you should do the opposite, restore the image (OS-Name.iso) into a drive (the USB flash drive), to do so you should use a command like this one:
sudo dd if=/path/to/the/image/OS.iso of=/dev/sdX
The X means the letter of the drive, you can find out with the next command (although it's usually b):
sudo fdisk -l
answered Jun 8 at 18:12
Boy GraffityBoy Graffity
1111 silver badge5 bronze badges
1111 silver badge5 bronze badges
add a comment
|
add a comment
|
You could also add status=progress
since it takes a while to copy the iso
sudo dd if=file.iso of=/dev/<usb drive> status=progress
if you dont know where is your usb drive, use the lsblk
command in terminal
add a comment
|
You could also add status=progress
since it takes a while to copy the iso
sudo dd if=file.iso of=/dev/<usb drive> status=progress
if you dont know where is your usb drive, use the lsblk
command in terminal
add a comment
|
You could also add status=progress
since it takes a while to copy the iso
sudo dd if=file.iso of=/dev/<usb drive> status=progress
if you dont know where is your usb drive, use the lsblk
command in terminal
You could also add status=progress
since it takes a while to copy the iso
sudo dd if=file.iso of=/dev/<usb drive> status=progress
if you dont know where is your usb drive, use the lsblk
command in terminal
answered Jun 8 at 20:08
ChristianChristian
11 bronze badge
11 bronze badge
add a comment
|
add a comment
|
1
Also: UEFI only USB key, just extract ISO ( 7 zip or similar) to FAT32 formatted flash drive partition & set boot flag. askubuntu.com/questions/395879/… and: help.ubuntu.com/community/mkusb or wiki.ubuntu.com/Win32DiskImager/iso2usb
– oldfred
Jun 8 at 18:23
3
What do you mean by "it just trous put errors" (it seems incomprehensible)? Respond by editing your question, not here in comments.
– Peter Mortensen
Jun 8 at 19:24
2
It could also be great that you give more details on what you have tried. "I have tried everything" sounds a bit vague :)
– FloT
Jun 8 at 20:11