Hello,
I just finished converting an Debian image into a DietPi system on a BananaPiPro (H20).
The final statement is: "Completed, disk can now be saved to .img for later use (...)"
But there is no hint how to do this, and I can't find this option in Etcher.
So: What do I have to do for this?
Cheers,
Lelo
How can I create an .img for later use?
Re: How can I create an .img for later use?
If you have a windows machine
Use Win32diskimager it is capable of reading/writing raw .img files
Be advised...it copies the ENTIRE drive...so the image will the the same size as your sdcard...and they .img files can get pretty darn large
If you have a linux machine there is a program called PiShrink that will strip out all the "unused" part of the image and create an image that is much reduced
Use Win32diskimager it is capable of reading/writing raw .img files
Be advised...it copies the ENTIRE drive...so the image will the the same size as your sdcard...and they .img files can get pretty darn large
If you have a linux machine there is a program called PiShrink that will strip out all the "unused" part of the image and create an image that is much reduced
Re: How can I create an .img for later use?
Thanks for your reply. So the upcoming steps are:
- Enter "shutdown now" on the BananaPiPro
- Take out the SD card, put it into a Win-PC and use "Win32diskimager" to create a large .IMG-file
- Put this large .IMG-file to a Linux-PC and run "PiShrink" to create a smaller .IMG-file.
- This smaller .IMG-file can then be written by Etcher to the SD-card if my system is messed up.
Right?
Precisely...or you can use the dd command on your linux machine circumventing the Win-PC if you have an active linux box anyway...
https://askubuntu.com/questions/227924/ ... dd-command
- Enter "shutdown now" on the BananaPiPro
- Take out the SD card, put it into a Win-PC and use "Win32diskimager" to create a large .IMG-file
- Put this large .IMG-file to a Linux-PC and run "PiShrink" to create a smaller .IMG-file.
- This smaller .IMG-file can then be written by Etcher to the SD-card if my system is messed up.
Right?
Precisely...or you can use the dd command on your linux machine circumventing the Win-PC if you have an active linux box anyway...
https://askubuntu.com/questions/227924/ ... dd-command
READING:
Insert the original sd card and check the name of the device (usually mmcblkX or sdcX):
sudo fdisk -l
In my case the sd card is /dev/mmsbkl0. Now you have to unmount the device:
sudo umount /dev/mmcblk0
Now to create an image of the device:
sudo dd if=/dev/mmcblk0 of=~/sd-card-copy.img
This will take a while.
Once it's finished, insert the empty sd card. If the device is different (USB or other type of sd card reader) verify its name and be sure to unmount it:
sudo fdisk -l
sudo umount /dev/mmcblk0
Write the image to the device:
sudo dd if=~/sd-card-copy.img of=/dev/mmcblk0
The write operation is much slower than before.