Please note that the use of the dd
tool can overwrite any partition of your machine. If you specify the wrong device in the instructions below, you could delete your primary Linux partition. Please be careful.
- Run
df -h
to see what devices are currently mounted. - If your computer has a slot for SD cards, insert the card. If not, insert the card into an SD card reader, then connect the reader to your computer.
- Run
df -h
again. The new device that has appeared is your SD card. The left column gives the device name of your SD card; it will be listed as something like/dev/mmcblk0p1
or/dev/sdd1
. The last part (p1
or1
respectively) is the partition number but you want to write to the whole SD card, not just one partition. You therefore need to remove that part from the name, getting, for example,/dev/mmcblk0
or/dev/sdd
as the device name for the whole SD card. Note that the SD card can show up more than once in the output ofdf
; it will do this if you have previously written a Raspberry Pi image to this SD card, because the Raspberry Pi SD images have more than one partition. - Now that you’ve noted what the device name is, you need to unmount it so that files can’t be read or written to the SD card while you are copying over the SD image.
- Run
umount /dev/sdd1
, replacingsdd1
with whatever your SD card’s device name is (including the partition number). - If your SD card shows up more than once in the output of
df
due to having multiple partitions on the SD card, you should unmount all of these partitions. - In the terminal, write the image to the card with the command below, making sure you replace the input file
if=
argument with the path to your.img
file, and the/dev/sdd
in the output fileof=
argument with the right device name. This is very important, as you will lose all data on the hard drive if you provide the wrong device name. Make sure the device name is the name of the whole SD card as described above, not just a partition of it; for example,sdd
, notsdds1
orsddp1
, andmmcblk0
, notmmcblk0p1
.dd bs=4M if=2016-11-25-raspbian-jessie.img of=/dev/sdd
- Please note that block size set to
4M
will work most of the time; if not, please try1M
, although this will take considerably longer. - Also note that if you are not logged in as root you will need to prefix this with
sudo
. - The
dd
command does not give any information of its progress and so may appear to have frozen; it could take more than five minutes to finish writing to the card. If your card reader has an LED it may blink during the write process. To see the progress of the copy operation you can runpkill -USR1 -n -x dd
in another terminal, prefixed withsudo
if you are not logged in as root. The progress will be displayed in the original window and not the window with thepkill
command; it may not display immediately, due to buffering. - Instead of
dd
you can usedcfldd
; it will give a progress report about how much has been written. - You can check what’s written to the SD card by
dd
-ing from the card back to another image on your hard disk, truncating the new image to the same size as the original, and then runningdiff
(ormd5sum
) on those two images. - The SD card might be bigger than the original image, and
dd
will make a copy of the whole card. We must therefore truncate the new image to the size of the original image. Make sure you replace the input fileif=
argument with the right device name.diff
should report that the files are identical.dd bs=4M if=/dev/sdd of=from-sd-card.img truncate --reference 2016-11-25-raspbian-jessie.img from-sd-card.img diff -s from-sd-card.img 2016-11-25-raspbian-jessie.img
- Run
sync
; this will ensure the write cache is flushed and that it is safe to unmount your SD card. - Remove the SD card from the card reader.
This article uses content from the eLinux wiki page RPi_Easy_SD_Card_Setup, which is shared under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license