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How To Show Hidden Files In Pendrive In Windows 10

Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. Method 0: Automatically create Alive USB system
    1. Live USB creator (GUI-based)
  3. Method ane: Installing Ubuntu directly to USB bulldoze from installer CD
  4. Method 2: hiding the ISO epitome in a partitioning in the USB drive
  5. Method iii: Copying the ISO CD epitome to the USB drive
    1. Preparing the USB drive
      1. Making partitions
          1. Make partition one:
          2. Set the file system of division 1 to FAT:
          3. Make partition 2:
      2. Alternate sectionalization layout
      3. Formatting the partitions
    2. Installing Ubuntu on the USB drive
    3. Making the drive bootable
      1. Install bootloader
  6. Installing Ubuntu on USB drive using Windows
      1. UNetbootin (GUI-based, runs from either Windows or Linux)
    1. Preparing the USB drive
    2. Installing Dapper or Edgy on the USB bulldoze
    3. Making the bulldoze bootable
  7. See also

/Comments

Introduction

Information technology is possible to accept Ubuntu or Kubuntu on a USB drive (AKA USB Stick or Thumb drive or Flash drive) or USB hard disk with persistent way. This means that yous tin kicking from a USB drive and go along customisations such as keyboard layout, numlock, preferences, additional packages saved on the drive. This tin can be done using linux or windows. You will need a USB drive of one GB or more. This page is written after having tested the instructions on a Peak III 1 GB drive. The grooming of the drive is explained using 'fdisk' considering I had errors with 'gparted' and i could non requite the partitions a volume name. I used Ubuntu to make the drive. In Kubuntu it is more or less the same. Where you run into 'ubuntu' supersede it past 'kubuntu'. I volition marking the other differences.

If you are looking for assist in putting the 'alternate' cd on a pen drive, so endeavour the instructions here: https://help.ubuntu.com/customs/Installation/FromUSBStick . They're for feisty, but more or less piece of work for gutsy too. Note that you lot may need to add together "vesa vga=771" to the append= line in syslinux.cfg in guild to become the installer to brandish properly.

Method 0: Automatically create Alive USB system

Jaunty (nine.04) onwards provide USB Startup Disk Creator system tool. Information technology uses the usb-creator to create USB bootable startup disk on USB bulldoze. You may also beginning the awarding from the terminal with :

          gksudo usb-creator-gtk

And so cull the desired ubuntu .iso image, the usb device you want to use, erase the deejay and set up the degree of persistence (the slider) you need. Note that the maximum space that tin be allocated for persistence is limited to 4GB (maximum file size on a FAT32 filesystem is 4GB). This limit can exist overcome and is explained subsequently. If you do desire a larger degree of persistence, set persistence to 128mb for at present and continue. Hit Brand Startup Disk and wait till it finishes. You are now in possession of a USB drive that can be used to run/install ubuntu on most computers. Persistence gives you lot the freedom to save changes, in the form of settings or files etc, during the live session and the changes are available the next time you lot kick via the usb drive.

To make the persistence larger (> 4GB), while yet on your normal Ubuntu Installation, mount the pendrive if it is non mounted already. View the files in the FAT32 segmentation of the pendrive. You will now be able to see a file called casper-rw. Information technology will be the aforementioned size every bit the value set up on the slider. Delete this file. Open gparted :

          gksudo gparted

select the live usb.

There volition be a unmarried partition only. Resize information technology so that you can have two partitions. You only demand the current partitioning to exist as large equally it is already. You can safely move the resizing slider all the way to the left until in that location is just enough breathing infinite between the slider and the stop of the first sectionalization (coloured block). Make the newly created complimentary infinite an ext4 or ext3 or ext2 division and label information technology "casper-rw" without the double quotes. Striking apply changes. And so now you have 2 partitions, the fat32 partitioning and the ext4 partition called casper-rw. This partition tin can exist of any size and will be responsible for saving your information between boots. You can now boot using the usb drive and any changes you brand will remain.

Alive USB creator (GUI-based)

Warning: Does Not create persistent installs on Hardy (viii.04 LTS) or earlier; works only with Intrepid 8.10.

Alive USB creator automates the process of creating a bootable Live USB organization from a running Ubuntu Live CD. Merely run the Live CD, install the tool and commencement the Alive USB installation from the System administration menu.

https://launchpad.net/liveusb -- probono

(A amend link: https://launchpad.net/liveusb/+announcements which explains that y'all run the livecd and the you click on the link: http://ppa.launchpad.net/probono/ubuntu/pool/primary/l/liveusb/)

{http://klik.atekon.de/liveusb/screenshot.png}

If you can't start the Live USB organisation from a running Ubuntu Live CD (perhaps you lack a functioning CD burner), you can actually just install liveusb to your normal system with the Ubuntu Live CD simply mounted. Mount the image using the command

sudo mount -o loop /path/to/cd-image /media/cdrom0

After running the liveusb control and installing to your USB key, unmount the image with

sudo umount /media/cdrom0

Method i: Installing Ubuntu direct to USB drive from installer CD

You can direct install Ubuntu eight.04 Hardy Heron to a USB drive using the Live CD. Simply select the USB drive as the installation target instead of the local difficult disk.

Note: This will use the USB drive for /tmp, which volition cause extra clothing on the flash memory. If you're booting from a system with enough RAM, it would be more desirable to utilise a tmpfs in RAM for /tmp, in which example yous'd want to re-create the ISO CD image to the USB drive and add together a persistent sectionalisation (see side by side section). On the other manus, if y'all're non concerned with your USB bulldoze wearing out (lifetime warranty, clothing leveling, etc), continue in this section.

Ensure in the "Installation Summary" screen that you choose to install Chow to the USB key stick, and not the computer'southward hard disk (click the Advanced button to do so). Choose to install GRUB to the start USB partitioning (i.eastward. /dev/sdb1, rather than but /dev/sdb). Failure to practise this will crusade the Grub on your hard disk to be changed and render the organisation unbootable from the difficult deejay, requiring you lot to boot from a CD and reinstall Grub to the hard disk (perhaps requiring a chroot to the hard disk drive filesystem start).

Yous will besides demand to manually edit the menu.lst file of the new USB installation to alter the kicking references to /dev/sda, rather than /dev/sdb (or /dev/sdc etc.). This can be done by booting to the live distro mode of the Ubuntu install CD and editing the /boot/chow/card.lst file on the USB stick. Yous can mount the USB stick using the Places menu -- one time mounted, it tin can be found at /media/disk. Annotation: This footstep may not always exist necessary.

Note: There is a bug with the Ubuntu viii.04 install CD that means USB key stick installs are screwed -- the desktop won't announced when you login. To get effectually this, you must do the following when you boot for the first time (before logging in at GDM):

1) switch to a virtual console (Ctrl+Alt+F2)

ii) kill the X-server (sudo killall gdm)

three) empty the /tmp folder (sudo rm -rf /tmp/*)

4) Type startx, and perform a system update when the desktop appears (if y'all don't desire to install a lot of software, just update the gnome-keyring parcel(s) -- that'due south the one that causes the trouble)

Note that this should be fixed in the Ubuntu 8.04.1 install CD.

If y'all'd like to empathize how the procedure works, the page A amend way to create a customized Ubuntu Alive USB drive has instructions to build a bootable, persistent USB bulldoze with Linux.

These instructions have been tested to work correctly with Ubuntu Intrepid Ibex (viii.x), and should work correctly with any distribution that uses Casper and supports persistency.

Method iii: Copying the ISO CD paradigm to the USB drive

Preparing the USB drive

8.04 Hardy: Unfortunately, there is a bug in the versions of casper in Hardy that cause the persistent partition to not be mounted on kicking. There is a workaround bachelor, and you can download a replacement initrd.gz for eight.04.1 (place in casper directory on first partition of USB key).

Practiced news! It IS possible to make Feisty persistent! These instructions are needed but not sufficient. Check thishttp://www.pendrivelinux.com/2007/09/20/how-to-brand-ubuntu-704-casper-persistent/. Essentially, you demand to decompress initr.gz (with gzip and cpio); edit the init file adding a case chosen 'persistent' (see details at the link) and recreate initr.gz. I guess that without this case, the 'persistent' passed in the syslinux.cfg is simply ignored. I got persistence at the starting time endeavor. Elfantin

Making partitions

Caution: Be careful using any disk utility to partition or format dives as a pocket-sized error could damage your operating system or overwrite a whole partition of files. Remove any external drives, cameras or other storage devices connected to your calculator (except for the USB bulldoze yous wish to repartition). Get familiar with the difference between i KB, one MB and 1 GB; as well equally the difference between a drive (e.one thousand. /dev/sda) and a partition (e.g. /dev/sda2). Get familiar with the drives and partitions on your computer: What are the sizes? Which is root, '/'? Which is the USB device?

Use 'disk utility' or 'gparted' to unmount the USB device, and and so to delete any existing partition(s). Create a 750 MB Fat partitioning named 'ubuntu' (or whatever); then an ext2 partition named 'casper-rw' (exactly) on the remaining infinite. Select the 750 MB ubuntu partition, click "edit partition" and check "bootable". If yous were successful, skip downwardly to #Installing Ubuntu on the USB bulldoze. If you prefer to work with 'fdisk' on the command line, continue reading below.

The grooming of the drive is explained below using 'fdisk'. You lot could use 'gparted' or 'disk utility' as well.

  • However I had errors with 'gparted' and I could not requite the partitions a volume name. I tested 'qtparted' too and information technology worked fine.

    Another issue in my case was that 'fdisk' recognised a fat32 filesystem as linux. And so I checked information technology with gparted and information technology was OK.

Plug in the drive and check its device name:

          mount

Assuming yous have your Ubuntu ready to automatically mount your USB stick, this should show you lot what /media/bulldoze or whatever it's called corresponds to on the device level.

Alternatively, you could run

          sudo fdisk -l

but if you have multiple devices on your organization, information technology will print a fair corporeality of adequately technical information.

Nosotros are going to suppose that its name is /dev/sdX where X is the disk device such as /dev/sda or /dev/sdc. Please be certain to substitute the correct letter of the alphabet for X which matches the device name you find for your pen drive. Double check it! [Note: on newer computers, which utilize series ATA disks, /dev/sda is typically the main difficult bulldoze; do non overwrite this!]

Annotation: on some usb-sticks fdisk says "Note: sector size is 2048 (not 512)", in which case you may very well be out of luck trying to boot from information technology, run across mailing list thread: Problem with 2GB USB Pendrive

Now nosotros are going to create 2 partitions: 1 partition of 750 MB with a fat32 filesystem and ane partition with the rest of the drive space with volume name "casper-rw" and ext2 filesystem. The first partitioning will exist fabricated active.

Open up 'terminal' and unmount the USB drive (replace 'sdX1' with the appropriate partitioning name):

          sudo umount /dev/sdX1

Burn down up 'fdisk' for the drive:

          sudo fdisk /dev/sdX

This volition give you the fdisk prompt. Wait to what you have on the drive. Cheque if you lot have to backup the data y'all have on it. 'p' will print the content of /dev/sdX. If you lot have partitions on information technology remove them ('d', 'partition number').

Brand partition 1:

i. 'n' for new partition

2. 'p' to make information technology a chief partition

3. '1' to call it segmentation number 1

iv. And then but printing enter to take the proposed starting cylinder

5. '+750M' to make its size 750 MB

6. Then 'a' to brand it the agile partition

Set up the file system of sectionalisation 1 to FAT:

1. 't'

2. and so 'one'

3. and so '6'

  • (I already had segmentation i selected then for me it was but 't' and then '6' -Jordan_U)

    there seems to exist an incongruity: when yous change the filesystem to FAT using option "t" the filesystem pick "half-dozen" is FAT16. w95/fat32 is pick "b". Which file system needs to be used? -rebelcat1

Make partition 2:

1. 'n' for new partition

ii. 'p' to make it a primary partitioning

3. '2' to call it partition 2

4. then only press enter to accept the proposed starting cylinder

5. then press enter to take the proposed ending cylinder

vi. Relieve and quit fdisk with 'w' to write the new settings.

  • I had an issue with this that every time I saved my sectionalization setup using 'w', I'd get:

                                Alarm: Re-reading the partitioning table failed with error22: Invalid argument.                            The kernel even so uses old tabular array.                            The new tabular array volition be available at the next reboot.
    • If this happens, and then checking with 'sudo fdisk -l' doesn't show the new partitions - here's a fix if yous have a Windows Os, though I don't know why it works:

      Do zip else with the drive. Insert into Windows (mine was XP) and format with Deejay Direction and utilize FAT32. Now, 'sudo fdisk -50' should come across the two partitions under the drive. -neverard

      • I had the aforementioned error, using gparted instead of fdisk worked for me -Jordan_U

Bank check the result:

          sudo fdisk -l

You should meet the 2 partitions with the first marked with a * considering information technology is active.

If ubuntu mounted the partitions again you should unmount them:

          sudo umount /dev/sdX1          sudo umount /dev/sdX2
  • brand sure (via fdisk -l) yous created a w95/fat and not a linux partition, otherwise i was unable to boot from information technology!! (i had to use gparted to achieve this) - bernstein

    • fdisk worked for me however - booted off CD - krishnan

Alternating segmentation layout

Please notation that Windows will only mount the first partition of any removable media - which includes USB flash drives. While you lot can get around this, it requires some highly kludgy driver procedures, which y'all are unlikely to be able to pull off on whatever machine where you are not an admin.

In brusk, having the Ubuntu Live every bit your start sectionalisation reduces the utility of your USB stick for what is statistically it's nearly likely job - transferring files to and from Windows machines.

          Sectionalisation 1 : FAT32, full size of stick minus 750M          Partition 2 : FAT16, 750M  (FAT16 considering older versions of syslinux don't like FAT32)

Follow the instructions, merely employ /dev/sdX2 instead of /dev/sdX1, and make sure you make /dev/sdX2 bootable in fdisk.

For persistence, follow the instructions to create a loopback file at LiveCDPersistence. This feature works fine from a loopback file inside a FAT32 filesystem, only as long every bit the file contains a supported unionfs filesystem like ext2.

At present yous have (mostly) the best of both worlds.

  • You tin transfer files between Windows machines on the FAT32 partition
  • You take a persistent Ubuntu thumb
  • Y'all can mount the FAT32 partition from a persistent Ubuntu boot (manually)
  • You lot can enlarge or shrink your casper-rw partition without having to repartition your pollex, just make a new loopback filesystem, mount them both, and re-create the files beyond.

If the persistent boot automatically mounted the root of the FAT32 filesystem also equally the casper-rw filesystem, it would be platonic.

Formatting the partitions

Nosotros volition at present format the partitions by putting a filesystem on and giving them the name 'ubuntu' (or any other name y'all want) and 'casper-rw' (this name is MANDATORY, practise not change other names and do not apply capital messages):

          sudo mkfs.vfat -F 32 -due north ubuntu /dev/sdX1          sudo mkfs.ext2 -b 4096 -L casper-rw /dev/sdX2

Mount the partitions on the drive. Accept out the bulldoze and put it back. Ubuntu Dapper or Edgy will mount the drive automatically if y'all have checked this choice under System -->Preferences--> Removable media. Otherwise use 'mount':

          sudo mountain /dev/sdX1 /media/mountpointyouhave1          sudo mount /dev/sdX2 /media/mountpointyouhave2

On recent Ubuntu versions, the USB stick's partitions should simply appear under /media/ubuntu and /media/casper-rw if you have followed the proposed naming convention.

Installing Ubuntu on the USB drive

Download the Ubuntu image (for case, ubuntu-11.04-desktop-i386.iso) or put in an Ubuntu install CD if you take it.

If you lot apply the downloaded prototype y'all tin mount it to make information technology accessible as follows, using 'terminal' (supposing that the iso epitome is in the current directory):

          mkdir ubuntuCD          sudo mountain ubuntu-xi.04-desktop-i386.iso ubuntuCD -o loop

You tin can now access the files via the 'ubuntuCD' folder.

Open the CD's top-level folder and make sure that y'all see the subconscious files too. (verify that View-->Show Hidden Files is checked).

Copy the post-obit folders and files to the 750 MB partition of your USB drive:

  • Copy folders: '.disk', 'casper', 'dists', 'install', 'pics', 'pool' and 'preseed' (skip the 'kick' folder);
  • Copy the folder 'isolinux' to the drive and rename it to 'syslinux';
  • Re-create the file 'README.diskdefines', and optionally, the 'usb-creator.exe' and 'wubi.exe' files (skip the 'autorun.inf' and 'md5sum.txt' files);
  • Rename the file 'syslinux/isolinux.cfg' to 'syslinux/syslinux.cfg' on the USB drive past right clicking on it and selecting 'rename';
  • Rename the file 'syslinux/isolinux.bin' to 'syslinux/syslinux.bin'.

Alternately, yous tin can run the following commands in 'last'. If you copy/paste, have care to make your browser window large enough to not have accidental line breaks inserted. And retrieve to replace /media/ubuntu with /media/whatmountpointyouhave1 if you used a different proper name for the mount bespeak.

Add together the -v option to cp to get some progress indication. The casper/filesystem.squashfs file in item is large, and takes a long time to copy.

          cd ubuntuCD          cp -rf casper dists install pics puddle preseed .deejay /media/ubuntu          cp -rf isolinux /media/ubuntu/syslinux          cd /media/ubuntu/syslinux          mv isolinux.cfg syslinux.cfg          mv isolinux.bin syslinux.bin

The FAT32 file system will non allow symbolic links to be copied over. Y'all will get a warning almost this, just it is harmless.

Unmount the iso prototype that you lot mounted to a higher place, using 'terminal'.

          sudo umount ubuntuCD

Making the drive bootable

Nosotros are going to install the linux bootloader 'syslinux'. This bootloader gets its carte du jour from 'syslinux/txt.cfg'. We will modify this file. Open 'syslinux/txt.cfg' from the USB bulldoze with your favorite text editor. For example:

          cd /media/ubuntu/syslinux          gedit txt.cfg

The post-obit edits need to be made:

  • Search and supersede '/cdrom' with zippo;
  • Re-create the first 'label' department, paste it in before itself, and make the post-obit edits to this new section:
    • The 'label' argument should be changed to something unique, here nosotros use 'persistent';
    • The 'menu label' should be changed to describe the option; '^Use Ubuntu in persistent way' would seem suitable, with a caret before the "U" to make information technology a shortcut cardinal for this pick;
    • The word 'persistent' should be added into the 'append' line (this is the crucial point!);
  • Optionally, alter the 'default' to the label name used to a higher place (eastward.one thousand. 'persistent').

The following is an example of what you lot might end up with:

          default persistent          label persistent                    menu label ^Employ Ubuntu in persistent mode                    kernel /casper/vmlinuz                    suspend  file=/preseed/ubuntu.seed boot=casper persistent initrd=/casper/initrd.lz tranquility splash --          characterization live                    menu label ^Endeavor Ubuntu without installing                    kernel /casper/vmlinuz                    append  file=/preseed/ubuntu.seed boot=casper initrd=/casper/initrd.lz quiet splash --          characterization live-install                    carte label ^Install Ubuntu                    kernel /casper/vmlinuz                    append  file=/preseed/ubuntu.seed boot=casper merely-ubiquity initrd=/casper/initrd.lz repose splash --          label check                    menu label ^Check disc for defects                    kernel /casper/vmlinuz                    append  boot=casper integrity-check initrd=/casper/initrd.lz quiet splash --          label memtest                    menu characterization Examination ^memory                    kernel /install/mt86plus          label hd                    menu characterization ^Boot from first difficult disk                    localboot 0x80

The menu choice called 'persistent' was made the default and so that when booting up y'all can just hit 'Enter' to start your customized session.

Install bootloader

The concluding affair to exercise is install the bootloader. Brand certain you have the 'syslinux' and 'mtools' packages installed. If not, open 'synaptic' and select them from the package list to mark them to be installed, and then "apply" the changes.

Or use 'aptitude' or 'apt-get' from the control line. For case, the following command should be harmless if they are already installed.

          sudo aptitude install syslinux mtools

First yous need to unmount your usb stick using 'deejay utility', or employ 'terminal' to enter the following commands (replacing 'sdX1' with the advisable partition proper name for the 750 MB ubuntu partition on your USB device):

          cd ~          sudo umount /dev/sdX1

This command will install the bootloader on your drive:

          syslinux /dev/sdX1
  • don't know why, merely i had to use the -f switch, (syslinux -f /dev/sdc1) - bernstein

    • same here - I had to use the -f switch - krishnan

    syslinux complained it couldn't create LDLINUX.SYS, but it worked in the Windows version (see below) - JanSchlüter

    Co-ordinate to this page1 syslinux iii.35 should exist used to go back up for fat32, edgy ships with three.11. According to the changelog 3.35 but seems to introduce support for subdirectories.

If yous get the error:

          sh: mcopy: command not found          syslinux: failed to create ldlinux.sys

then you will need to install the 'mtools' package.

Eject the drive:

          squirt /dev/sdX

Kicking on the USB drive, modify some settings, reboot once more and check if the changes are kept (persistence check).

Do non forget to bank check if the computer y'all are going to use, boots USB devices first (look in BIOS settings).

Then that is it. Enjoy (thousand)ubuntu where e'er yous go.

  • If yous kicking the drive and persistency works but when you lot log in to gnome you get a bulletin saying that it couldn't write to .ICEauthority, then a uncomplicated set up is deleting .ICEauthority. Y'all can automate that by doing this:

                                echo >> .bashrc                            echo "# This makes GNOME work" >> .bashrc                            echo "rm .ICEauthority 1>/dev/null two>/dev/null" >> .bashrc

Those using Lucid (10.04) to make a pen drive to boot Precise (12.04) that is to say, using the previous LTS release to go to the side by side i, will need to be aware of this incompatibility between the syslinux versions involved:

https://bugs.launchpad.internet/ubuntu/+source/syslinux/+bug/608382

at that place are a couple of work-arounds (eg, typing 'help' at the prompt so hitting 'enter') just the bug has been triaged and labeled WONTFIX since Maverick and as late equally March 2012.

Installing Ubuntu on USB drive using Windows

UNetbootin (GUI-based, runs from either Windows or Linux)

UNetbootin automates this task past providing a GUI to create a bootable Ubuntu Live USB drive from an ISO file, and can be run from both an installed Windows or Linux organisation, or from a liveCD.

http://sourceforge.net/dbimage.php?id=294729

Preparing the USB drive

TODO This is not updated for Gutsy

Download a copy of the HP format utility for USB drives, this utility makes it as easy to format USB pen drives every bit it is to format floppies.

Don't bother wasting your fourth dimension with this HP utility - it is rather useless. You can format the entire drive as FAT32 using the congenital in windows format (right click on the bulldoze and select format, make sure to select FAT32 as the FS type). I found no mode to partition the drive in windows, non fifty-fifty with PowerQuest's Sectionalization Magic (which normally does everything you lot could want). Either boot off an ubuntu CD/DVD and follow the linux instructions, or if you tin't exercise that, simply follow these instructions but use the whole wink drive for the live CD, so in one case you accept booted from it, y'all can repartition and make the ext2 volume from within ubuntu itself. I just pulled the flash drive out and re-inserted information technology - this ensures ubuntu is no longer using it. Not sure what the risks are - I didn't have whatever troubles, just perhaps you should do this at your own chance (or maybe somebody knows a safer fashion). If somebody knows a free utility which can partition a flash drive in winxp, please put it here!!! - mrwolf

Plug in your USB pen bulldoze and apply the HP format utility to format it with a FAT32 filesystem.

Using a partitioning tool, create two partitions. The commencement is formatted with a FAT32 filesystem and needs to be 750 MB. The 2nd should occupy the remaining free space and should be formatted with the ext2 filesystem and is given the name "casper-rw". Note! Almost DOS partition tools will create the partition name in upper-case letter (CASPER-RW). Since Linux is case-sensitive you demand to do the formatting of the second division in Linux. The persistent feature will not work if the segmentation name is in capital letter. See the Wiki for details. https://assistance.ubuntu.com/customs/LiveCDPersistence

Installing Dapper or Edgy on the USB bulldoze

This is the same as described in the Linux section except for accessing the downloaded image. The way to do this is to mount the iso epitome file and copy the files that mode. You tin can practise this with NERO or Windows VirtualCD. You might want to practise it this manner if yous don't desire to burn a CD.

Making the drive bootable

Get to http://syslinux.zytor.com/iso.php and download a copy of syslinux-3.11.goose egg for Windows. Extract the cypher file contents and move the extracted binder to your favorite location on your hard drive.

Open WordPad and edit the file syslinux.cfg as described in the Linux section.

Open a command prompt and change directory to the location of the syslinux folder. For example, if you placed the folder on your desktop so: cd C:\Documents and Settings\(your user name)\Desktop\syslinux-3.11\win32 (by the way you DO know that control prompt has command completion just like in Linux (starting time entering characters and then press the TAB key to complete the entry)).

Next write the bootsectors to the flash drive by entering the post-obit command:

          syslinux -maf X:
  • where X: is replaced past the drive letter of your USB primal. Be careful to option the correct drive letter!
  • This volition write the Master Kicking Record (MBR), as well as marking the partition active.

Run into also

  • http://world wide web.pendrivelinux.com

  • http://www.debuntu.org/how-to-install-ubuntu-linux-on-usb-bar

  • https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/FromUSBStick


CategoryCleanup CategoryLive CategoryUsb CategoryBootAndPartition CategoryBootAndPartition

Source: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/LiveUsbPendrivePersistent

Posted by: bradfordoluter.blogspot.com

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