Leftovers from the CommonMark conversion.
2.3 KiB
Booting from a USB flash drive
The image has to be written verbatim to the USB flash drive for it to be bootable on UEFI and BIOS systems. Here are the recommended tools to do that.
Creating bootable USB flash drive with a graphical tool
Etcher is a popular and user-friendly tool. It works on Linux, Windows and macOS.
Download it from balena.io, start the program, select the downloaded NixOS ISO, then select the USB flash drive and flash it.
::: {.warning} Etcher reports errors and usage statistics by default, which can be disabled in the settings. :::
An alternative is USBImager, which is very simple and does not connect to the internet. Download the version with write-only (wo) interface for your system. Start the program, select the image, select the USB flash drive and click "Write".
Creating bootable USB flash drive from a Terminal on Linux
- Plug in the USB flash drive.
- Find the corresponding device with
lsblk
. You can distinguish them by their size. - Make sure all partitions on the device are properly unmounted. Replace
sdX
with your device (e.g.sdb
).
sudo umount /dev/sdX*
- Then use the
dd
utility to write the image to the USB flash drive.
sudo dd if=<path-to-image> of=/dev/sdX bs=4M conv=fsync
Creating bootable USB flash drive from a Terminal on macOS
- Plug in the USB flash drive.
- Find the corresponding device with
diskutil list
. You can distinguish them by their size. - Make sure all partitions on the device are properly unmounted. Replace
diskX
with your device (e.g.disk1
).
diskutil unmountDisk diskX
- Then use the
dd
utility to write the image to the USB flash drive.
sudo dd if=<path-to-image> of=/dev/rdiskX bs=4m
After dd
completes, a GUI dialog "The disk
you inserted was not readable by this computer" will pop up, which can
be ignored.
::: {.note}
Using the 'raw' rdiskX
device instead of diskX
with dd completes in
minutes instead of hours.
:::
- Eject the disk when it is finished.
diskutil eject /dev/diskX