Finally, copy the image to the USB device. If you have multiple devices attached, it may be a different number so make sure you check this part. ![]() Note the first part “ /dev/disk1“, this is the USB device that we need to unmount as can be seen from the size. You need to find the section that looks like this: The first job is to identify and unmount the USB device. Hdiutil convert -format UDRW -o centosdvd.img CentOS-7.0-1406-x86_64-DVD.isoģ. You will need to ajdust the filename if you downloaded something other than the DVD iso. ![]() In terminal, navigate to the directory where your CentOS download is saved (“Downloads” in my case).Ģ. This has only been tested on the CentOS 7 download but it should work for any bootable ISO.ġ. When you have downloaded the CentOS ISO image that you’d like to run from USB, there are a few simple commands to run from the terminal so that you can create a bootable USB key.
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