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Full Discussion: make bootable usb from iso
Operating Systems Linux Fedora make bootable usb from iso Post 302512792 by Corona688 on Monday 11th of April 2011 03:58:55 PM
Old 04-11-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by locoroco
I need to boot the ultimate boot cd from an usb stick. Do I just copy the iso image to the usb key?

How do I make the usb stick bootable?
We get asked this all the time. Maybe we should make it part of the FAQ.
  1. There's no magic "make bootable CD into bootable USB drive" program. They're too different to be directly compatible with each other.
  2. Sometimes you'll find special tools like the program which makes Win7 ISO's into bootable flash drives, but that only works for specific versions of specific programs; it needs to be able to understand them, and reconfigure them for the different boot device. This is because:
  3. A USB flash drive isn't a CDROM, period, no ifs, ands, or buts. You can't fool the BIOS into believing it is. It will believe it's a hard drive.
  4. This means dumping an ISO image onto a USB drive won't work. The BIOS won't know what to do with it.
  5. You need different bootloaders to boot from a USB drive rather than a CDROM drive anyway.
  6. You could install your own bootloader, and build a custom initrd containing minimal software allowing it to mount an ISO image off of the USB drive, and chroot into that. But the ISO file probably expects to be run off of a CDROM, and will complain mightily about not being able to find its contents -- unless the distro has special arrangements to allow you to tell it where to find itself. So it depends on the distro.

A USB drive is a hard drive as far as the system's concerned. Booting from it generally means either installing on it like it's a hard drive, or using some special arrangement a particular distro might have for booting from USB disk.

None of this is necessary for what you want however which, last I checked, was running memtest86. You can boot a kernel with kexec. Just find the memtest86 kernel inside those ISO's and kexec into it.

Last edited by Corona688; 04-11-2011 at 05:06 PM..
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MKRESCUE(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       MKRESCUE(8)

NAME
mkrescue - make rescue floppy or CD SYNOPSIS
/sbin/mkrescue makes a bootable rescue floppy or CD using the default kernel specified in lilo.conf. DESCRIPTION
mkrescue takes its specifation for the kernel from the default image specified in /etc/lilo.conf. If the actual default is an other= spec- ification, then use the first image= specification. Any associated initial ramdisk (initrd=), and append= options will also be used. The root directory will be taken to be the current root. A bootable floppy or CD-image will be created using LILO version 22.5.5 or later. mkrescue normally requires no options, unless a CD-image is desired (--iso). OPTIONS
--append <string> Override any append= options taken from the default image. If there is any doubt about whether the lilo.conf options are correct, then specify no kernel parameters by providing the null string (--append ""). --debug Provide verbose output of the operation of mkrescue, pausing to allow the setting of internal operating parameters to be viewed. <CR> must be hit to proceed from these pauses. --device <device> Make the floppy on a device other than /dev/fd0. The floppy disk will always be made to boot on BIOS device code 0x00 (A: drive), without regard to the drive on which it is created. --fast Use a faster method of creating the boot floppy. This involves first creating a file of --size 1k blocks (default is 1440) mounted using a loopback device, creating the bootable floppy, then copying the entire file to the disk. --fs [ ext2 | msdos | minix ] Specify the type of filesystem to create on the drive. ext2 is the default, but msdos and minix allow slightly more disk sectors for really big kernels. --help Print a short usage synopsis, including a list of command options. --image <label> Specifies the label or alias of the particular image from which the append, initial ramdisk, root, keytable, and kernel information is to be taken. --initrd <filepath> and --kernel <filepath> These options, which must be used together, allow specification of an arbitrary kernel file and initial ramdisk file to be used on the created boot floppy. Be sure you know what you are doing before you use these options. If no inital ramdisk is needed with a particular kernel, then you MUST specify --initrd "", meaning a null pathname. --install [ text | menu ] Allows overriding the default human interface used with the rescue bootloader (configuration file "install=" option). text is the default on 1.2MB and 1.44MB floppy disks, and menu is the default on 2.88MB floppies and HD emulation on CD-R media. --iso Create an ISO-9660 bootable CD image (El Torito Format) suitable for burning to a CD-R or CD-RW. The --device specification defaults to the filename rescue.iso, and the --size defaults to 2880. A utility such as "wodim" may be used to burn the ISO file to a recordable CD medium. With this ISO option, the --size HD option is allowed. --nocompact For faster kernel loading from a floppy, LILO map compaction is normally enabled. This option will disable map compaction by omit- ting the lilo -c switch. --noformat Suppresses creation of a new filesystem on the boot floppy. This option may be used ONLY when you know that the floppy you will be writing upon is formatted with the same filesystem as specified by --fs XXX (default is ext2). --root <device> Specify the root filesystem for the kernel on the boot floppy. The currently mounted root is taken as the default specification. --size [ 1440 | 1200 | 2880 | HD ] The default floppy disk size is 1440, meaning a 1.44MB floppy. When --iso is specified, the default size is 2880. Allowed specifi- cations are 1200, 1440, or 2880, meaning a 1.2MB, 1.44MB or 2.88MB floppy, respectively. No other floppy disk sizes are supported. The HD specification, meaning "hard disk", may only be used with the --iso option, to indicate a 16MB hard disk is to be generated for emulation. This allows for very large kernel/initial ramdisk combinations on CD-R. The hard disk image is created using loop- back devices /dev/loop0 and /dev/loop1, which must be free to utilize this size option. --version Print the version number of mkrescue, then terminate. SEE ALSO
cdrecord(1), dd(1), wodim(1), lilo.conf(5), lilo(8), mkfs(8), mkinitrd(8), mkisofs(8), mount(8) 6 Mar 2011 MKRESCUE(8)
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