Burning ISOs: Difference between revisions
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<pre>cdrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 speed=4 alpine-standard-3.8.0-x86.iso</pre> | <pre>cdrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 speed=4 alpine-standard-3.8.0-x86.iso</pre> | ||
Debian has <code>cdrskin</code>, which can be invoked just like <code>cdrecord</code> above. | Debian, like Alpine, has <code>cdrskin</code>, which can be invoked just like <code>cdrecord</code> above. | ||
Revision as of 14:17, 1 July 2018
This material is work-in-progress ... Do not follow instructions here until this notice is removed. |
Burning an image to a CD or DVD
On systems that ship cdrtools (e.g., Gentoo, openSuSe, NetBSD, Slackware), you can use cdrecord
to write an image to a disc, for example:
cdrecord -v speed=4 alpine-standard-3.8.0-x86.iso
If there's only one CD drive on the system, it should be auto-detected. If not, find the device name using lsblk
and specify the dev
option, for example:
cdrecord -v dev=/dev/sr0 speed=4 alpine-standard-3.8.0-x86.iso
Debian, like Alpine, has cdrskin
, which can be invoked just like cdrecord
above.
See also:
- Arch Wiki on CD Burning
- Arch Wiki on DVD Burning
Example:
growisofs -Z /dev/dvd=/path/to/dvdimage.iso
Copying an installation image to a USB key
- Arch Wiki on Copying Install ISOs to a USB key, though note that
mkarchiso
generates hybrid ISOs, whereas as far as I know,alpine-iso
does not
Creating an image from a CD
To do the converse operation, copying a CD to an ISO image, just do:
dd if=/dev/cdrom of=/path/to/cdimage.iso
Mounting an ISO image
To mount an ISO without physically burning it to a CD:
modprobe loop LOOP=`losetup -f` losetup $LOOP /path/to/cdimage.iso mount -t iso9660 -o ro $LOOP /mnt ... # when finished umount /mnt losetup -d $LOOP # this step may happen automatically when you umount
or see Arch Wiki on fuseiso.