wiki/deploy/medium.md
2021-11-21 13:50:56 +00:00

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title description published date tags editor dateCreated
Phyllome OS meets a thumb drive true 2021-11-21T13:50:54.245Z markdown 2021-11-13T11:34:07.852Z

Create an installation medium

In this section, you will learn how to download Phyllome OS and how to create a live medium that will allow you to boot it from a thumb drive.

If you intent to install Phyllome OS permanently on your computer, follow this procedure but use a Fedora Server ISO instead, as it is not yet possible to install Phyllome OS from the live image. {.is-warning}

1. Download Phyllome OS

The Phyllome OS ISOs files are made available on GitHub.

As of now, only the Phyllome OS Desktop II edition is available as an ISO file. The II edition is tuned for Intel CPUs and Intel GPUs. It is also known as ldhi, for live, desktop, hypervisor, and intel.

As of now, there is no checksum available, and the release is not signed using GPG keys. Among other things, it means that there is no guarantee about the authenticity of the file or its integrity, whatsoever. Alternatively, a safer is to deploy Phyllome OS in a virtual machine or to deploy it directly on a host using this method {.is-warning}

2. Load Phyllome OS on a USB flash drive

The following instructions may have to be adapted depending on the operating system that you are currently using.

  • General requirements
    • A fast USB 3.0 flash drive of at least 2 GB

Command-line instructions (Linux-only): flash a USB disk using the dd command line tool

The next command assumes that the ISO file is available in the Downloads folder and that the target medium is called sdz. You can identify the correct target device using the lsblk command line tool. Modify the command according to your context.

This command requires root privileges {.is-info}

This command will destroy any data on the target device {.is-danger}

dd bs=4MB if=~/Downloads/phyllome-live_ldhi_v0.2.0-alpha_x86_64.iso of=/dev/sdz

Manual instructions: flash a USB disk using Etcher

The instructions are designed with Etcher in mind. Other tools such as Rufus, Unetbootin or Ventoy are likely to work too.

Etcher is an open-source, cross platform tool for flashing images to a target medium. It is developed and made available by balena. {.is-info}

  • Download Etcher

You can download Etcher on the official website.

Pick the right version depending on your platform.

  • Install it

Follow the normal procedure to install an application on your computer.

An account with administrator rights will be needed. {.is-info}

  • Use it

Insert a blank flash drive

Open Etcher. You will be greeted by this screen. Click on Flash from file

capture-balenaetcher-1.png

Browse where the ISO is stored and select Open

capture-balenaetcher-2.png

Etcher should have autodetected your USB flash drive. If this is not the case, press Change on the welcome screen and pick the desired destination on the new window.

capture-balenaetcher-3.png

Select Flash when you are ready

Selecting Flash will destroy any data on the target device {.is-danger}

capture-balenaetcher-4.png

Wait a few minutes...

capture-balenaetcher-5.png

Congratulations, the USB flash drive is now ready to use! {.is-success}

capture-balenaetcher-6.png


When you are done, if you have followed the procedure with the Phyllome OS ISO, go to the section Get started with the Live system. If you have followed the procedure using Fedora Server, with the intent of installing Phyllome OS permanently, please go to the Install Phyllome OS page instead