Difference between revisions of "Robotino3 usb restore"
From RobotinoWiki
(→Create a bootable USB-Stick) |
(→Create a bootable USB-Stick) |
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* Select your USB stick from the list (not the UEFI entry). | * Select your USB stick from the list (not the UEFI entry). | ||
* After booting into tinycore the [http://svn.openrobotino.org/tinycore/restore.sh restore script] is executed automatically. | * After booting into tinycore the [http://svn.openrobotino.org/tinycore/restore.sh restore script] is executed automatically. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Trouble shooting=== | ||
+ | ====No image found==== | ||
+ | This can happen, when mounting of the USB-stick failed. Please try the following steps: | ||
+ | <pre> | ||
+ | sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/sdb1 | ||
+ | sudo restore.sh | ||
+ | </pre> |
Revision as of 13:37, 5 August 2013
Introduction
Robotino 3 has a SSD that stores the operating system. A bootable USB stick is used to
- initialy install the Robotino OS to a new SSD
- overwrite the OS on a SSD already in use.
Create a bootable USB-Stick
- Download the Robotino3 custom image.
- Take a USB-Stick and format it (quick format will do)
- Use Core2USB to install this custom image to the USB stick.
- Download the latest image and it's md5 file from here. With Firefox you need to right-click the file and choose save link.
- Check the integrity of the image using md5. Run md5 -Check:imagefilename.fsa.md5.
- Copy the image into the boot directory of your USB-stick.
- Attach monitor and keyboard to your Robotino 3.
- Plug the USB stick into any of Robotino3's USB port.
- Power on Robotino3 and hit the F7 as long as you can see the BIOS startup screen.
- Select your USB stick from the list (not the UEFI entry).
- After booting into tinycore the restore script is executed automatically.
Trouble shooting
No image found
This can happen, when mounting of the USB-stick failed. Please try the following steps:
sudo mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt/sdb1 sudo restore.sh