 076a57df81
			
		
	
	076a57df81
	
	
	
		
			
			Corrects visibility of target labels in upstream builds where they have been conditionalized out of partner builds. Signed-off-by: Ron Stone <ronald.stone@windriver.com> Change-Id: Idba58292e72ca9daf1e5827ba212f519c8d52b29
		
			
				
	
	
	
		
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	Create Bootable USB
Follow the instructions for your system to create a bootable USB with the StarlingX ISO:
- bootable-usb-linux
- bootable-usb-mac
- bootable-usb-windows
Create a bootable USB drive on Linux*
- Open a terminal and get root privilege: - sudo -s
- Get the StarlingX ISO from the CENGN StarlingX mirror. Alternately, you can use an ISO from a private StarlingX build. 
- Navigate to the directory with the ISO. 
- Plug in the USB drive and get its identifier: - lsblk- This will list available disks and their partitions. 
- Unmount the USB drive before burning an image onto it. (Note that some Linux distros automatically mount a USB drive when it is plugged in.) For example: - umount /dev/sdd2
- Burn the StarlingX bootimage.iso onto the USB drive: - dd if=</path/to/bootimage.iso> of=<your USB device> bs=1M status=progress
Caution
Not fully unmounting the USB drive before burning an image can cause file system checksum errors. If this happens, burn the image again, ensuring all the USB drive partitions are unmounted first.
Create a bootable USB drive on macOS*
- Launch the Terminal app. 
- Get the StarlingX ISO from the CENGN StarlingX mirror. Alternately, you can use an ISO from a private StarlingX build. 
- Navigate to the directory with the ISO. 
- Plug in a USB drive and get its identifier: - diskutil list- This will list available disks and their partitions. 
- Unmount the USB drive identified in the previous step. For example: - diskutil umountDisk /dev/disk2
- Burn the StarlingX bootimage.iso onto the USB drive. The example below burns an ISO onto `<your USB device>`: - sudo dd if=</path/to/bootimage.iso> of=<your USB device> bs=1m- To speed up the imaging process, add an ‘r’ in front of the disk identifier. For example /dev/rdisk2. - Press - <CTL>-Tto check imaging progress.
- Eject the USB drive. - diskutil eject /dev/disk2
Create a bootable USB drive on Windows*
- Get the StarlingX ISO from the CENGN StarlingX mirror. Alternately, you can use an ISO from a private StarlingX build.
- Download the Rufus utility to burn the image onto a USB drive. Only use the latest version of Rufus.
- Plug in the USB drive and open Rufus.
- Under Boot selection, click the SELECTbutton.
- Find and select the StarlingX ISO.
- Click the STARTbutton.
- When the dialogue appears, select Write in ISO image mode (Recommended).
- Select the Windows taskbar menu for USB and select eject.