Installing Fatdog64
on a flash drive for UEFI and BIOS booting
Note 1: If you only want to boot on
computers with BIOS then use the Fatdog64 installer found in the
Control Panel.
Note 2: If you only want to boot on computers with UEFI then use Fatdog64 UEFI installer found in the Control Panel.
Note 3: The method given below will create a read-only
filesystems for the boot files. You cannot modify boot
configuration (isolinux.cfg or grub.cfg). It will also
completely erase your flash drive. If you don't like this
limitation or prefer a more flexible solution for UEFI-only
booting, please refer to this alternative
installation method.
Note 4: There is also another alternative solution if you need to boot on BIOS and UEFI.
The Fatdog64 ISO file is a dual-hybrid ISO file. To install it to
a USB flash drive, all you have to do is
dd the
file on to it. Keep in mind that all files on the flash drive will
be destroyed. The flash drive will have two partition tables on
it, and Gparted cannot handle adding or modifying partitions
correctly.
Please read
all
of the following steps carefully
before
actually doing anythig:
1) Plug in the flash drive you want to use. When it
appears on the desktop note it's device name. For example "sdb".
2) In the directory that contains the Fatdog64 iso file
open a terminal and type this:
dd if=./«Name of iso file» of=/dev/«Flash drive device name» bs=4M
Replace «Name of iso file» with the real
name of the iso file and replace «Flash drive device name»
with your flash drive's device name from step 1. The 'if' stands
for input file, the 'of' stands for output file, and 'bs' stands
for block size. The './' means to look in the current directory.
For example if I wanted to dd the
Fatdog64-620.iso file on to my flash drive which is identified as
sdb. I would do this:
dd if=./Fatdog64-620.iso of=/dev/sdb bs=4M
Make sure that you have the
correct device name for you flash drive. If you use the
wrong one you could erase you hard drive!
Some flash drives might show desktop icons for sdb and sdb1,
and maybe for more partitions. For your device name, use the
device name without a number.
3) If you flash drive was bigger than 256MB you can
add another partition to use the remaining space for storage.
Gparted will have problems with this, fdisk can do it if you're
careful not to overlap your new partition. Better yet, you can use
the fix-usb.sh script to do it for you. In the terminal
type:
./fix-usb.sh /dev/«Flash drive device name»
Then follow the instructions fix-usb.sh gives you.
Note: The fix-usb.sh script is also in the root of the iso
in case you're using another Linux distribution.
4) If you have any doubt about what you're doing
stop now before you
start anything!
Removing Fatdog64 Installation on USB Flashdrive
An USB flashdrive on which the Fatdog.iso has been
written following the steps above,
cannot be
re-partitioned with Gparted anymore because Fatdog's
hybrid partitions (combining ISO partition, GPT and MBR
partitions) confuse Gparted, regardless of whether it is treated
with
fix-usb.sh
or not. It will boot, it
will work, and it will work very well with Linux on BIOS and UEFI
system, but yo cannot re-partition it again with Gparted because
it thinks that the flashdrive has invalid partitions.
If you ever need to re-partition the flash drive again, you need
to be aware of two things:
a) Doing so will delete all data on the flash drive, so please
back up your data first.
b) It will remove Fatdog installation permanently
And to do this, just do
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/«Flash drive device name» bs=1M count=1
After doing this Gparted will regard you flash drive as completely
empty and will offer to create a new MS-DOS partition table -
which you should accept.
Make sure that you have the
correct device name for you flash drive. If you use the
wrong one you could erase you hard drive!