How to Make a Bootable Flash Drive using ISObooter
> What if additionally there's even no cd/dvd drive? (And slow usb 1.0)
Well, now I found something really useful :
- LICK-discussion http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... &start=435
- and a good collection of Puppy exe-installers https://archive.org/details/Puppy_Linux ... _Installer
_ _ _
So my troubles with the very disabled laptop may be over?
Sadly the Win7 in it stopped working. For this very machine the exe-installers came too late.
Somewhere buried behind the former Windows is a bootloader with choices "Windows" (no more available) and Slacko 5.7 (working ok). The latter brings me to the choices written in /initrd/mnt/dev_save/menu.lst
Now I need a wise decision where to download the ISO not to disturb my Slacko and its save-file. Any suggestions?
Well, now I found something really useful :
- LICK-discussion http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... &start=435
- and a good collection of Puppy exe-installers https://archive.org/details/Puppy_Linux ... _Installer
_ _ _
So my troubles with the very disabled laptop may be over?
Sadly the Win7 in it stopped working. For this very machine the exe-installers came too late.
Somewhere buried behind the former Windows is a bootloader with choices "Windows" (no more available) and Slacko 5.7 (working ok). The latter brings me to the choices written in /initrd/mnt/dev_save/menu.lst
Now I need a wise decision where to download the ISO not to disturb my Slacko and its save-file. Any suggestions?
- Max Headroom
- Posts: 421
- Joined: Wed 28 Jun 2006, 07:17
- Location: GodZone Kiwi
- Contact:
G'day rcrsn51, Please Help because I've Corrupted Me GumBoot USB ( ie. isobooter ) by intending & Attempting 2 Add a Swap Partition 2 the eNd of the USB
Now I just get
Cannot overwrite an independent Partition.
partnew (hd0,3) 0x00 (hd0,0)/Angel_Student_Eco.iso
Error 30: invalid argument
Press any key to continue...
Of Course I've Searched on the iNet, like so...
isobooter Cannot overwrite an independent partition Error 30: invalid argument Solved
4 the answer, But there's Nun
of course I've really shot a Hole in Me GumBoot, having 60 isos, Mostly working!
K
Now I just get
Cannot overwrite an independent Partition.
partnew (hd0,3) 0x00 (hd0,0)/Angel_Student_Eco.iso
Error 30: invalid argument
Press any key to continue...
Of Course I've Searched on the iNet, like so...
isobooter Cannot overwrite an independent partition Error 30: invalid argument Solved
4 the answer, But there's Nun
of course I've really shot a Hole in Me GumBoot, having 60 isos, Mostly working!
K
- Max Headroom
- Posts: 421
- Joined: Wed 28 Jun 2006, 07:17
- Location: GodZone Kiwi
- Contact:
Thanx rcrsn51 4 Replying, Yes I did Notice that, But didn't do it because I dunno about how it works out w/ the menu.lst file, also will that Fix the Error 30: invalid argument?
Also I should have mentioned previously while I was running the isobooter script it was sumtimes / often ( about 1/2 the time, but random whether I choose Y or N ) returning
isoinfo: Unable to find Joliet SVD
& I did Run WinContig on All the iso files & they're Clean ie. No Fragmentation... aRe these 2 issues Related?
Thanx Mate 4 Your Wisdom!
:)K
Also I should have mentioned previously while I was running the isobooter script it was sumtimes / often ( about 1/2 the time, but random whether I choose Y or N ) returning
isoinfo: Unable to find Joliet SVD
& I did Run WinContig on All the iso files & they're Clean ie. No Fragmentation... aRe these 2 issues Related?
Thanx Mate 4 Your Wisdom!
:)K
- Max Headroom
- Posts: 421
- Joined: Wed 28 Jun 2006, 07:17
- Location: GodZone Kiwi
- Contact:
Don't Answer Questions Posted to The HOWTO SubForum
Hi All,
This is the HOWTO (Solutions). It's purpose is to provide a place for "How to do things, solutions, recipes, tutorials".
Among the objectives of this Forum is to provide help and advice in a manner that anyone seeking it can easily find it. One way of accomplishing that goal is to attempt to maintain some semblance of order so that people know where to look.
There are threads pertaining to each Puppy. There are threads pertaining to most applications. There's a Beginner's Forum for questions regarding how to get started. There are threads dealing with hardware issues. There's the Users SubForum for discussions about most Puppy related issues which may not easily fall into some other thread or SubForum.
This is the HOWTO (Solutions). It's purpose is to provide a place for "How to do things, solutions, recipes, tutorials".
I suggest that no one respond to questions posted here. Perhaps such silence will provide a clue to the poster to read the Title and Subtitle appearing on the Subforums.
mikesLr
This is the HOWTO (Solutions). It's purpose is to provide a place for "How to do things, solutions, recipes, tutorials".
Among the objectives of this Forum is to provide help and advice in a manner that anyone seeking it can easily find it. One way of accomplishing that goal is to attempt to maintain some semblance of order so that people know where to look.
There are threads pertaining to each Puppy. There are threads pertaining to most applications. There's a Beginner's Forum for questions regarding how to get started. There are threads dealing with hardware issues. There's the Users SubForum for discussions about most Puppy related issues which may not easily fall into some other thread or SubForum.
This is the HOWTO (Solutions). It's purpose is to provide a place for "How to do things, solutions, recipes, tutorials".
I suggest that no one respond to questions posted here. Perhaps such silence will provide a clue to the poster to read the Title and Subtitle appearing on the Subforums.
mikesLr
Hi rcrsn51,
I am a faithful user of Isobooter. Everything I throw at it, it boots with ease.
The only thing I have problems with, is if I try to copy and/or download any ISO (that is over 4GB in size) onto my 64GB Isobooter USB thumbdrive. For example:
---OpenSUSE (size: 4.7GB)
---Windows 10 (size: 4.3GB)
---Debian 9.3 (size: 4.4GB)
I keep getting the error: "Error writing to file: File too large".
Is there a way around this when using Isobooter? Since FAT32 is limited to 4GB file size??
I am a faithful user of Isobooter. Everything I throw at it, it boots with ease.
The only thing I have problems with, is if I try to copy and/or download any ISO (that is over 4GB in size) onto my 64GB Isobooter USB thumbdrive. For example:
---OpenSUSE (size: 4.7GB)
---Windows 10 (size: 4.3GB)
---Debian 9.3 (size: 4.4GB)
I keep getting the error: "Error writing to file: File too large".
Is there a way around this when using Isobooter? Since FAT32 is limited to 4GB file size??
Maybe not useful in your situation, but I have a thumb that I formatted ext2 and installed grub2 on that I use for booting iso files over 4gig. Grub2 doesn't require the iso to be in a single extant, either.belham2 wrote: The only thing I have problems with, is if I try to copy and/or download any ISO (that is over 4GB in size) onto my 64GB Isobooter USB thumbdrive.
hello, when i run isobooter-win on vista, nothing gets intalled to the drive.
any ideas?
thx
any ideas?
thx
[b]Now[/b]: X-Tahr 2.0! StretchDog! DevuanDog!
[b]Tops[/b]: TarhNOP Vlina-R2 Racy
[b]Used[/b]: Puppeee Precise Lucid Wary Tahrpup Quirky Slacko MacPup Saluki Puppy Studio LxPupTarh Lina-Lite Lina
[i]i ♥ Puppy[/i]
[b]Tops[/b]: TarhNOP Vlina-R2 Racy
[b]Used[/b]: Puppeee Precise Lucid Wary Tahrpup Quirky Slacko MacPup Saluki Puppy Studio LxPupTarh Lina-Lite Lina
[i]i ♥ Puppy[/i]
-
- Posts: 168
- Joined: Fri 26 Jan 2018, 20:54
not sure i'm getting "stuck" anyplace.
i run through the whole process, and should end up with 4 files on the usb: the 3 files i copies over from the iso, plus the 1 file installed by isobooter.
but i only end up with the files i manually copied over-- isobooter doesn't install anything. the drive remains blank after running isobooter.
i run through the whole process, and should end up with 4 files on the usb: the 3 files i copies over from the iso, plus the 1 file installed by isobooter.
but i only end up with the files i manually copied over-- isobooter doesn't install anything. the drive remains blank after running isobooter.
[b]Now[/b]: X-Tahr 2.0! StretchDog! DevuanDog!
[b]Tops[/b]: TarhNOP Vlina-R2 Racy
[b]Used[/b]: Puppeee Precise Lucid Wary Tahrpup Quirky Slacko MacPup Saluki Puppy Studio LxPupTarh Lina-Lite Lina
[i]i ♥ Puppy[/i]
[b]Tops[/b]: TarhNOP Vlina-R2 Racy
[b]Used[/b]: Puppeee Precise Lucid Wary Tahrpup Quirky Slacko MacPup Saluki Puppy Studio LxPupTarh Lina-Lite Lina
[i]i ♥ Puppy[/i]
The four files are ALL copied by you.7. Copy the files grldr, menu.lst and isobooter onto the USB drive.
8. Copy a Linux ISO onto the USB drive.
9. Rename the ISO file as "linux.iso".
10. There should now be four files on the USB drive - grldr, menu.lst, isobooter and linux.iso.
The grubinst_gui.exe binary makes the flash drive bootable.
You don't run the isobooter script under Windows - it's there for after you get Puppy booted.
How-to-install Puppy has yet been solved
ISObooter is really an efficient tool. About mikeslr opinion i fully agree. people should think that the answer to How-to-install Puppy has yet been solved. Just search in the forum in the right place. No need to build new systems which loose newbies in hazardous expermental boot systems.
Don't ignore Grub4Dos, Don't ignore Isobooter Or loose yourself in Grub2... or img2key, or Porteus, or casper..
People don't read how-to, they transfer research to helpers. So well don't ask them to use Linux booter for Ubuntu or Porteus, listen to Puppy Linux tools
Failing to dual-boot puppy and windows 7 is unbelievable.. Just consider that sda1 not to be touched..
Some VIPs still think that a Puppy cannot be boot without having burn a CD... And don't want to admit different ways.
TO be positive This topic has been translated to french by esmourguit Utiliser ISObooter traduction en français
Don't ignore Grub4Dos, Don't ignore Isobooter Or loose yourself in Grub2... or img2key, or Porteus, or casper..
People don't read how-to, they transfer research to helpers. So well don't ask them to use Linux booter for Ubuntu or Porteus, listen to Puppy Linux tools
Failing to dual-boot puppy and windows 7 is unbelievable.. Just consider that sda1 not to be touched..
Some VIPs still think that a Puppy cannot be boot without having burn a CD... And don't want to admit different ways.
TO be positive This topic has been translated to french by esmourguit Utiliser ISObooter traduction en français
- Attachments
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- isobooter.jpg
- 2 Puppies Fr Slaxen and Stretch by expert Puppy Dev Josejp2424 (latino) and 2 dogs
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Hi rcrsn51,
I still think ISOBooter is one of the best things you've ever done, and that's saying something since I use so many other of your created things.
Currently, I have ~24 ISOs I use on ISOBooter, from pups to ddogs to many Linux distros, and they all work/boot great (except sometimes Fedora-based ones get picky).
But I have only one question: I know Fat32 has a max file limit size of 4GB (if I recall correctly). Well, I forgot this, and I went and downloaded the latest CentOS-7 64-bit (size 4,7GB) and then tried to transfer it into ISOBooter. Then I remembered the limitations of FAT32. Knowing this, I was wondering, is there any chance in the future that a re-vamped ISOBooter (using different partitioning) could/would work with the bigger ISOs from the mainline Linux distros like the 4.7GB CentOS-7 iso?
I still think ISOBooter is one of the best things you've ever done, and that's saying something since I use so many other of your created things.
Currently, I have ~24 ISOs I use on ISOBooter, from pups to ddogs to many Linux distros, and they all work/boot great (except sometimes Fedora-based ones get picky).
But I have only one question: I know Fat32 has a max file limit size of 4GB (if I recall correctly). Well, I forgot this, and I went and downloaded the latest CentOS-7 64-bit (size 4,7GB) and then tried to transfer it into ISOBooter. Then I remembered the limitations of FAT32. Knowing this, I was wondering, is there any chance in the future that a re-vamped ISOBooter (using different partitioning) could/would work with the bigger ISOs from the mainline Linux distros like the 4.7GB CentOS-7 iso?
Not to my knowledge. ISObooter uses a Grub4Dos technique that only works with FAT32.But I have only one question: I know Fat32 has a max file limit size of 4GB (if I recall correctly). Well, I forgot this, and I went and downloaded the latest CentOS-7 64-bit (size 4,7GB) and then tried to transfer it into ISOBooter. Then I remembered the limitations of FAT32. Knowing this, I was wondering, is there any chance in the future that a re-vamped ISOBooter (using different partitioning) could/would work with the bigger ISOs from the mainline Linux distros like the 4.7GB CentOS-7 iso?
Although, I don't know anything about exFAT.
[Edit] It looks to me like Grub4Dos does NOT recognize exfat partitions.
You could always "burn" the CentOS ISO onto a flash drive with dd.
Hi Belham,
Then add entry in menu.lst that chainloads GRUB2 and have entries in grub.cfg to boot ISO's that are on the second (ext3/4 formatted) partition.
If you are interested, just tell me and I'll try to explain the steps.
The advantage of using GRUB2 for ISO booting is that fragmenting is not a problem (in contrary to using grub4dos (problem can be that the ISO is "not contiguous")).
Disadvantage is that booting ISO "from splash screen" (displaying isolinux screen with the entries) like grub4dos can do) is not possible with GRUB2 AFAIK (but anyone correct me if I'm wrong).
Best Wishes
EDIT: Tried earlier GRUB2 booting with Debian and Ubuntu ISO's, now tried a Puppy, and it didn't boot to the desktop.
Error is: main .sfs not found. Maybe needs some special parameter that I don't know of.
Fred
It can be done with GRUB2, but it's a bit complicated "manual way", i.e. install GRUB2 to a partition (not write MBR) e.g. sdb2.Then I remembered the limitations of FAT32. Knowing this, I was wondering, is there any chance in the future that a re-vamped ISOBooter (using different partitioning) could/would work with the bigger ISOs from the mainline Linux distros like the 4.7GB CentOS-7 iso?
Then add entry in menu.lst that chainloads GRUB2 and have entries in grub.cfg to boot ISO's that are on the second (ext3/4 formatted) partition.
If you are interested, just tell me and I'll try to explain the steps.
The advantage of using GRUB2 for ISO booting is that fragmenting is not a problem (in contrary to using grub4dos (problem can be that the ISO is "not contiguous")).
Disadvantage is that booting ISO "from splash screen" (displaying isolinux screen with the entries) like grub4dos can do) is not possible with GRUB2 AFAIK (but anyone correct me if I'm wrong).
Best Wishes
EDIT: Tried earlier GRUB2 booting with Debian and Ubuntu ISO's, now tried a Puppy, and it didn't boot to the desktop.
Error is: main .sfs not found. Maybe needs some special parameter that I don't know of.
Fred