Psf Josh Setsyssersum.dmg To Usb
- Psf Josh Setsyssersum.dmg To Usb Adapter
- Psf Josh Setsyssersum.dmg To Usb Drive
- Psf Josh Setsyssersum.dmg To Usb Driver
- I have a OneFS image we're trying to revive a IQ1920 we have. I want to just format it since we cannot login to it. Can anyone tell me how to take the OneFSv6.5.4.118reimg.img and write it to a USB.
- With PowerISO, you can manipulate dmg files on Windows PC. PowerISO can burn dmg file directly to a CD / DVD disc. You needn't convert dmg to iso file before burning. To burn dmg file on Windows PC, please follow the steps, Run PowerISO, and insert a blank or rewritable optical disc in the drive.
DMG files are a Mac OS X Disk Image files. like ISO files, DMG files are essentially disk images, which are intended to be used with the Mac operating system. The DMG files normally contain program installation files for Apple system and applications, but they can also be used to hold compressed files. With PowerISO, you can manipulate dmg files on Windows PC. PowerISO can burn dmg file directly to a CD / DVD disc. You needn't convert dmg to iso file before burning.
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To burn dmg file on Windows PC, please follow the steps,
Psf Josh Setsyssersum.dmg To Usb Adapter
Run PowerISO, and insert a blank or rewritable optical disc in the drive.
Click 'Burn' button on toolbar or select the 'Tools > Burn' Menu.
PowerISO shows 'DMG Burner' dialog.
Click 'Browse' button to select the DMG file you want to burn.
Select the burning drive and the burning speed from the list. The default burning speed is maximum speed supported by the writer and media. You can change it to a slower speed if necessary.
Click 'Burn' button to start burning.
PowerISO will start burning the dmg file to the disc. You can see the detailed progress information during burning. If no error occurs, you should see the message, 'Burning completed successfully.' at the end of burning. If 'Verify written data' is set, PowerISO will compare the source data with the data written to the disc, and show the compare result after comparing completes.
Related Topics:
Burn ISO File
Burn NRG File
Burn DAA File
Burning Settings
Creating a bootable USB drive for the Apple PowerPCs is complicated due to the fact that they use Apple's HFS (Hierarchical File System) as its native file system. But with the help of some special tools available on PowerPC Linux, construction of bootable drives is possible. Here is how it's done.
Your Mileage May Vary
I have a PowerBook G4 running Xubuntu 10.04 and I will be using a 1 GB USB drive. This means that while the information is accurate for this hardware but you may have to adapt it to your circumstances.
However, ( active, self-casting ) will prevent DoT applications. The damage is often done every second or every half-second, and each instant in which it is dealt is called a 'tick'.The slow effect from is applied from the first tick of the DoT until 1 seconds after the last tick.For single-target DoT spells, will be applied to the total amount of damage dealt by all ticks.Becoming (, ) does not stop DoT. Damage over time ( DoT) is a term used to describe a single spell or attack which deals full damage not instantly but over a period of time, dealing a portion of its total damage at regular intervals.
I used the UNIX convention of the user prompt as '$ '
and the root prompt as '# '
. The prompt that you see may differ from this so make adjustments for it.
I have expanded many of the directories in the commands. This is to make clear what they're are. A isolated period for the current directory is hard to spot, so I wrote it as the longer version. You may, of course, use the shortest version to save typing.
Psf Josh Setsyssersum.dmg To Usb Drive
Create A Working Directory
The first step is to create a place to work. Open a terminal and create a directory to work in.
We going to need two mount points. In Linux, a mount point is simply a directory, so:
Open your browser and download the ISO image of Linux you want to use. My browser puts it in the Downloads directory. Move the ISO image to your working directory.
Working As root
To create the drive, it is necessary to work as root
. Use sudo
to start a shell as root
.
Determining The Serial Drive Of The USB
When you plug a USB device into the computer, the Linux OS assigns it a serial device number and creates an entry for it in the /dev
directory. These devices are given a file name in the form of /dev/sd?
where the ?
is a lowercase letter starting with a
.
To determine which file is the USB drive, before you plug it in do:
This gives you a list of all the existing serial drives. Now plug it in and repeat the above command. The new one is the one for the USB drive. Write it down; you'll need it later.
Note: For the following examples, I'll be using /dev/sda
. Change this to the device you discovered here.
If any window opened when you plugged in the drive, close them all. Also, if any partition was mounted, unmount it. You can tell if any are mounted with this command:
As you can see, the partition /dev/sda2
, which is part of /dev/sda
is mounted. To unmount it:
If it doesn't complain, it worked.
Partitioning The USB Drive
Warning: This step will destroy any data on the USB drive.
The drive must be partitioned in HFS. The utility mac-fdisk
does this.
The first step is to initialize a new map. Use the i
command for this.
If a map already exists, which is likely, answer y
to reinitialize it. When asked for it size, just press RETURN
for the default which is the maximum size.
Now, take a look at the map; use the p
command for this. You'll be using this command to get the first block of the remaining partitions. They're listing under the column called base
.
Now create the bootstrap partition with the b
command. Use the base of the /dev/sda2
as its first block.
The remainder of the drive will be used to hold the files from the ISO image. We will create a Linux partition for that. Use to c
command to do this. Copy & paste the base and length for the first block and length. I used the name 'xubuntu' for the partition but you can use any you like, or leave it blank.
Now write the map to the drive with the w
command. Answer y
to the question.
Finally, quit with q
.
Note: Your system might automatically mount the partitions. If it does, unmount them.
Listing The Partitions
You can list the partition on the device at anytime with the -l
option of mac-fdisk
. This will come in handy when mounting the partitions.
Creating A File System
A file system has to be created on the partition. I choose to make it ext2
since this does not require the access time to be updated every time a file is read.
The -v
is for verbose output. Since this takes some time, this tells you what is happening. The -L
option allows you to name the file system. Leave it out if you don't want to.
Loading The ISO Files
Note: This could take a long, long time, like 20-30 minutes. Also, the computer is doing a lot of I/O, so it may not be very responsive to anything you do, like move the mouse. My advice: go for coffee.
Mount the USB drive.
Mount the ISO file as a file system.
Now, load the ISO files to the device.
This command is complicated but can be broken down. This parenthesis groups the commands. The pipe, ' ' tells it to pipe the stdout of the first group to the stdin of the second.
Psf Josh Setsyssersum.dmg To Usb Driver
The first command of the first group changes the directory to the ISO image. It then runs the Tape ARchiver (tar
) in the directory. The c
option means to create a new archive. The B
option means to read full records; this makes it go as fast as it can. The p
option preserves permissions. The f
option means the name of the archive follows. This this case, it's a minus sign, which means it will sent its archive to stdout, which becomes the stdin of the second group. And finally, the period means start in the current working directory, which is ./iso
.
The first command of the second group changes the directory to ./usb
, our USB drive. Then another tar
takes over. The x
option means to extract the files from the archive in stdin. The v
option means verbose: list the files as they are extracted. The rest of the options are as above but the minus sign means to read the archive from stdin.
The computer may be ready for more commands before all the bytes are written. This is because the low-level writes are buffered. It may be a while until it responds to your next command.
Now, get a copy of the bootloader, yaboot
, and its configuration file.
The chmod
command makes the configuration file writable.
Formatting The Bootstrap Partition
The bootstrap partition must be formatted before it can be used. Use the hformat
utility for this.
The -l
option allows you to give a label to the volume. Leave it out if you want it unnamed.
Loading The Bootstrap Partition
The bootloader for Linux devices on the PowerPC is yaboot
. It has to be loaded into the bootstrap partition and its attributes set. To do these, the volume must be mounted. Here is the sequence of commands to do this; all of them are special utilities for dealing with HFS.
The hmount
command mounts the partition so the other commands can work with it. The hcopy
command copies the yaboot
program to the USB drive. Its -r
option means copy raw; no conversion takes place. The colon is the HFS root directory. HFS uses colons where Linux uses slashes. The first hattrib
commands sets the attributes of the yaboot
program. The tbxi
code is a special code used by Apple to signify that the program is the bootloader program. There should be only one of these on a device. The second hattrib
commands blesses the root directory. I'm not sure what this means but it is required for the device to boot. Finally, the humount
dismounts the partition.
Configuring The Bootstrap
The yaboot
bootloader is configured by the yaboot.conf
file. It has two parts: a header and a list of images. The image section behinds with the first image=
option. Open the yaboot.conf
file in your favourite text editor and find the image section. Delete everything before it. (OK, you can keep the comments.) In their place, insert this:
The root
option tells where the root directory will be mounted, in this case, RAM. The partition
option says that all the images are in the third partition of the device. The message
is the message yaboot
will display at the start of the boot process. More on this later.
Save the changes and exit the editor.
Now, load the yaboot.conf
file with the following.
Changing The Boot Message (Optional)
First, mount the partition.
Create a local copy and change it.
Open it in your favourite text editor and change it to what you like. Save it and exit the editor. Now, load it on the device.
All Done
The USB drive is now ready for use. The last thing to do is exit the sudo
shell.
You will need two things to create a LiveUSB drive from a Linux/Intel machine.
The first is mac-fdisk
. I don't not know if a binary for this exists but you can download the source and compile it. One downlaod site is the mac-fdisk
source at Debian.
The other item you will need is hfsutils
. This is available as a binary and can be downloaded using your package manager.
Shawn H Corey <SHCOREY at cpan.org>
Contributing Authors
(Insert your name here if you modified this documentation. Do not remove this comment.)
Thanks to Skeeve42 at Ubuntu forums for his pointers.
Thanks to OSXbook.com for their insights on Open Firmware works.
Thanks to homey at LinuxQuestions.org for the mount ISO command.
Thanks to Sergio Hernandez for pointing out the hfsutils
to me.
Copyright 2010 by Shawn H Corey. All rights reserved.
Document Licence
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the Invariant Sections being Original Author, Copyright & Licences, and Document Licence.