1
First time asking here. Apologies in advance if formatting is bad.
I recently found myself in possession of several HP Elitebook Revolve 810's.
They have been stripped of their (mSATA) drive cards. I am able to boot from a Micro-SD card that has been flashed via dd, but I have been unable to get Ubuntu to install to the SD card when booted from a flash drive.
I know that when Rasbian is flashed to an SD card it creates a read-write filesystem. When I first began creating bootable flash drives for other operating systems, the first thing I noticed is that that does not happen as a general rule. I am assuming that this is due to the fact that most of the images used are .iso disk images. My current plan is as follows:
1. Create a partition on my working laptop of a slightly smaller size than
my Micro-SD.
2. Install Ubuntu to this partition.
3. Manually partition Micro-SD card with an EFI partition and a Partition
sized the same as the Ubuntu install on my working laptop.
4. dd the installed Ubuntu over to the SD card.
5. dd the EFI partition on my laptop to the Micro-SD card.
Is there anything that I need to look out for while I am performing this operation? I did basic googling, but most of what I got was "How to flash an SD card with Rasbian! New 2019, Easiest way!", which is not exactly helpful.
Most of my knowledge comes from various tinkering over the past year, and any advice would be appreciated.
1@Moab Thanks for the typo catch. Bit retarded today. – e-g-h – 2019-09-26T19:45:09.357
1
I just added an mSATA card to my laptop and was able to install Ubuntu and Windows both onto that mSATA drive; runs fast. Here's Amazon's list of mSATA drive cards: https://www.amazon.com/Internal-Solid-State-Drives-mSATA/s
– K7AAY – 2019-09-26T20:45:09.6971@e-g-h everyone has a fat finger day..... – Moab – 2019-09-26T21:36:55.147
1@K7AAY Thanks for the link, I was hoping to avoid having to purchase anything else, looks like I may not have that luxury. – e-g-h – 2019-09-30T18:33:10.193