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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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-1


















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?










share|improve this 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

















-1


















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?










share|improve this 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













-1












-1








-1


1







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?










share|improve this question


















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






share|improve this question
















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








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












  • 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










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0


















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





share|improve this answer

































    0


















    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






    share|improve this answer

































      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      0


















      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





      share|improve this answer






























        0


















        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





        share|improve this answer




























          0














          0










          0









          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





          share|improve this answer














          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






          share|improve this answer













          share|improve this answer




          share|improve this answer










          answered Jun 8 at 18:12









          Boy GraffityBoy Graffity

          1111 silver badge5 bronze badges




          1111 silver badge5 bronze badges


























              0


















              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






              share|improve this answer






























                0


















                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






                share|improve this answer




























                  0














                  0










                  0









                  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






                  share|improve this answer














                  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







                  share|improve this answer













                  share|improve this answer




                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Jun 8 at 20:08









                  ChristianChristian

                  11 bronze badge




                  11 bronze badge
















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