On Thu, 12 Nov 2015 12:36:28 +0100, Robert P. J. Day
<rpjday@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
for an upcoming class, i want to create bootable 64-bit fedora 23
systems on (probably) 16G USB drives. given that i want to do this
from a running fedora 23 system, and it can be a totally destructive
creation, what's the best way?
as i see it, i would probably do a single, initial install onto one
USB drive, then "dd" that image to all the rest. the USB drives need
to be writable, and (obviously) bootable from any system.
so far, i've found this wiki page:
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/How_to_create_and_use_Live_USB
and am looking at the liveusb-creator package. am i on the right
track?
rday
Hi,
there's the Fedora LiveUSB Creator tool, you could give that a shot.
It's hosted on [1] and you can get pre-built packages from [2].
If you want the flash drives to still be write-able, don't use the
destructive mode and make sure the flash drives are FAT32 formatted.
Feel free to ask anything (even directly) or report any issues/enhancement
requests.
Cheers,
Martin
[1] https://github.com/lmacken/liveusb-creator
[2] https://copr.fedoraproject.org/coprs/mbriza/liveusb-creator/
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