![]() └─sdy1 8:17 1 7.5G 0 part /run/media/linuxize/Kingston The output will look something like this: ![]() for this step and job i think we can use lsblk: Next step, we ought to find out the name of the USB drive. Insert the USB flash drive into the USB port. This tool is available on all Linux systems. That said: well i guess that we can do the creation of a USB flash installation i think that create a bootable Linux USB stick from the command line the usage of the dd tool could be a good idea. ![]() To avoid these downsides i want to create a bootable Linux USB Drive in Terminal - on Command Line This makes the rest of the usb-stick useless for anything else because in order to make use of the remainder of the it you would need to create a partition table at the beginning but this is space is already used up be the iso filesystem and bootloader. So whats the fuzz why do some systems take the whole usb-stick. The iso file (according the documentation) has got a read-only iso9660 files system so the usb device gets a read-only iso9660 file-system. ![]() The advantage here: This copies the iso file byte by byte onto the usb storage device. Well - that said: Most other distros create a live-usb with a simple "dd" copy of the iso file. what i am wondering is the question why on earth the USB image maker out there (on any distro) use up all the entire space on a USB stick to make any Live Linux, say MX-Linux, or OpenSuse or Debian, or my beloved Puppy or the ubuntu or Mint or whatsoever system, etc. I am wanting to create a bootable Linux-USB-Drive on the commmandline.
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