Feature changed by: Christian Jäger (eet) Feature #305658, revision 44 Title: Official USB stick images openSUSE-11.2: Evaluation Priority Requester: Desirable Requested by: Stephan Binner (beineri) Description: It would like to see openSUSE releases with official USB images (one with KDE, one with GNOME) next to the Live-CDs. As alternative the Live-CD images could be mastered in a way that they also can boot from USB (afaik they are not able atm) together with a small app/script to install them to USB - other distributions offer that. Discussion: #1: John Thomas (john_tomas) (2009-01-13 16:28:57) Official USB images together with a small app/script to install them would be extremely cool!!! Anyway, since you said "afaik they are not able atm" i can tell that there's 2 workarounds already please see: UNetbootin (http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/) wich is actually simple and easy Portable Suse (http://en.opensuse.org/Portable_SUSE) for wich there's also a very good toturial at PenDrive Linux (http://www.pendrivelinux.com/usb-suse-flash-drive-install/) Hope i've been of any help #2: Martin Schlander (cb400f) (2009-01-15 22:15:45) Just for clarification. The images should be installable, and preferably tested on top selling netbooks. Usb-images with only live capabilities "won't do". #3: Maksym Grytsenko (maksymgrytsenko) (2009-01-16 14:28:55) That would be nice! Lots of people already bought their netbooks, but the ease of installation is not always obvious #4: Andrey S (seld) (2009-01-16 15:12:02) This is a very good idea, since some notebooks don't even have a CD/DVD- drive (including mine), so sometimes you are unable to install from the CD and have to rely on unofficial live-USB guides. #5: Marcus Moeller (marcusmoeller) (2009-01-16 20:34:13) kiwi already allows usb installations. #6: hou ghi (houghi) (2009-01-17 11:16:02) This will not only be interesting for portables. I would rather use a USB key then burn a CD/DVD that I then trow away when the new version comes out. I believe this was also partly duscussed on FOSDEM last year. If all images would be available for download, this would be nice. Otherwise my preference would be Network, DVD version (4GB), Live CD's. Software to place the images on the USB stick must be available for Linux in GUI and CLI and also for Windows. Then instead of a flashlight in the boxed set, you could put a USB key in the boxed set. #7: Jimmy Berry (boombatower) (2009-01-18 10:40:56) SUSE Studio support a RAW format that can just be placed on a USB stick using dd. That would work for me...expect that you can't install from it. #8: Armin Moradi (amoradi) (2009-01-19 16:30:29) I think a software (GUI preferred) to make a live USB stick is not only a good idea, but a necessary one. I, too, would like to stick in my USB stick rather than burning another CD/DVD. Plus, KIWI method is not so obvious for new users, and SUSEstudio is not yet public. #9: Greg Kroah-Hartman (gregkh) (2009-01-20 05:05:01) So if we just turn the .iso live-cd images into usb images that can be copied with 'dd' to the stick, that's all that would be needed? #10: Tristan Hoffmann (tristanhoffmann) (2009-01-20 16:25:24) What about a yast module that makes it possbile to create openSUSE USB- Sticks? You have to think about people, who don't know what dd is, the normal users. It should be done in 3 Clicks ("Create openSUSE bootable USB Stick", Select the right USB device and "Yes, I am sure"). #13: Eric Springer (erikina) (2009-01-22 23:57:03) (reply to #10) As long as this isn't a replacement for a xplatform, xdistro solution. #11: Todd R (theblackcat) (2009-01-22 22:05:28) Would it be possible for a single USB stick image to be both bootable and be able to be launched in a virtual machine inside another OS? #12: Eric Springer (erikina) (2009-01-22 23:55:41) (reply to #11) Probably not a great spot for such questions, but the answer is yes. A virtual machine is just that, it emulates a real machine. So if it doesn't work, it would be a bug in the virtual machine. (But I'm not aware of such bugs) #14: Eric Springer (erikina) (2009-01-23 00:03:52) I personally like the idea of a "usb image". Something that can be directly copied (dd'd) onto a USB. We can make a couple simple GUI tools around it (for linux and windows) or perhaps extend some current burning programs. It offers the most flexibility (instead of some solution that's tied to a particular file system / weird booting scripts. Right now many distros accomplish bootable USBs in very different ways, but I think a "usb image" could become standard very quickly, which really would be nice. And while I'm dreaming, perhaps OBS could produce the .img's as a first class citizen alongside our iso's. #15: Stephan Kulow (coolo) (2009-02-09 15:37:26) Our 11.1 live cds can be used as USB images (see bug#441278). Anything else is a bug. For the future we might provide USB images that can be used as full system - without install option. But I don't see us providing any kind of GUI tools, leave alone to windows users. So I think this feature is done. Does someone want to check our wiki pages to make sure it does not state misinformations about the "live cds can be used as USB images"? + #16: Christian Jäger (eet) (2009-04-13 14:58:43) + I'm sorry, Stephan, but this answer can be seen as arrogant. If it is + so simple, WHY are there so many people asking how in the world to make + a bootable openSUSE USB stick and why, if it all should be so simple, + are the related how-tos so very, very complicated? If it really were so + that openSUSE Live-CD images could be used as USB-images, why is there + NO indication of that on the openSUSE websites whatsoever? + The how-tos on your wiki provide horribly complicated step-by-step + guides on how to use Kiwi to create usb-images! And then they point to + external guides for the conversion of live-CD images into live-USB + images. And - what surprise -, these guides are also horribly + complicated and nowhere near the ease-of-use your answer to this + feature requests implies. Fact is, Ubuntu does it right, why can't + openSUSE? Please, don't dismiss feature requests that easily in the + future! It really comes across as being user-unfriendly, bordering on + arrogant. -- openSUSE Feature: https://features.opensuse.org/305658