• Successful_Try543@feddit.de
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    7 months ago

    For Linux you don’t need a GUI tool, most how tos just dd the ISO onto the USB medium, e.g.

    sudo dd if=<file> of=<device> bs=16M status=progress oflag=sync
    

    like described in the Debian FAQs

    • Snot Flickerman
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      7 months ago

      Man, Google really does suck now. It feels nearly impossible to get something like a how-to deep in the Debian FAQs to come up, as it mostly surfaces this auto-generated SEO crap for How To’s.

      Very cool, I’d assumed there was a simple command line set of commands, just was failing to find it. Thanks.

      • s38b35M5@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Man, Google really does suck now. It feels nearly impossible to get something like a how-to deep in the Debian FAQs to come up, as it mostly surfaces this auto-generated SEO crap

        By design. The longer you’re Googling, the more ads they can sell.

        …Ben Gomes – a long-tenured googler who helped define the company during its best years – lost a fight with Prabhakar Raghavan, a computer scientist turned manager whose tactic for increasing the number of search queries (and thus the number of ads the company could show to searchers) was to decrease the quality of search. That way, searchers would have to spend more time on Google before they found what they were looking for.

    • orsetto@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 months ago

      I don’t remember where, but i read that this method only works because linux distributors “abuse” the ISO format to allow this. If I remember right, it’s not possible to use this ISOs on regular disks

      Of course the command you provided is right and it’s what I use, it’s just a fun fact

      • Successful_Try543@feddit.de
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        7 months ago

        Yes and no, it’s the other way round. The ISOs often are hybrid images which you can burn onto a CD/DVD or dd onto a USB pen drive. Until approximately 10-15 years ago, if I remember correctly, the distributed Linux ISOs where standard not hybrid images, thus you always needed some other program to create bootable USB media.

    • wildbus8979@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      If you want to create fully custom boot images the command debootstick is pretty cool too!

      It’s essentially a wrapper for debootstrap that creates bootable images. It can create both live and installer images.

      qemu-debootstrap is also super useful if you want to customize and image for a different architecture (for example building custom RPi images).

      • Snot Flickerman
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        7 months ago

        qrmu-debootstrap is also super useful if you want to customize and image for a different architecture (for example building custom RPi images).

        Super useful information, thanks!

        EDIT: Is this anything like the isorespinner.sh? I’ve previously used that to get Linux on an RCA Cambio W101 because it needed a fancy ISO since it has a 32-bit bootloader and a 64-bit CPU.

        • wildbus8979@sh.itjust.works
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          7 months ago

          I believe the script you are talking about repackages an existing iso. Debootstick builds one from scratch by pulling all the necessary packages from the repository.

          For the underlying process of creating this image it uses debootstrap which is the standard Debian way of creating a full system installation (minus the whole bootloader and iso shenanigans). Debootstick allows most options from debootstrap (aka selecting a distro, release, mirror, extra packages, etc).