So if you simply "raw" copy an isohybrid processed image to a USB flash drive, the BIOS will boot the image directly. These isohybrid images contain in addition to the normal CD-based ISO9660 filesystem, a valid-looking DOS-style partition table. Starting in version 3.72, ISOLINUX supports a "hybrid mode" which can be booted from either CD-ROM or from a device which BIOS considers a hard disk or ZIP disk, e.g. You need to write to the disk path because isohybrid prepends a partition structure to the ISO. dd needs to write to the disk path, not the partition path: in the above example /dev/sde is the disk path device, /dev/sde1 is the partition path (e.g., sde1 is the first partition on sde). ![]()
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