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Getting Started: Linux Live Images
This page provides some information and links to Live Linux DVDs or USB images that include bladeRF support.
This is a great place to start if you are new to Linux, and is a better choice than using a virtual machine for a few reasons:
- SDR support and applications are pre-installed
- All of your CPU and RAM are dedicated to the OS, rather than splitting between a guest and host.
- It's very portable!
- You can often create persistent data region on live USB sticks to save your changes to the image
- The quality and reliability of USB pass-through support varies across different VM software offerings.
There are a myriad of useful resources regarding burning ISOs to DVDs and preparing bootable USB sticks on the web. Below are a just a few guides. Feel free to add any guides you've found helpful!
- An Ubuntu community wiki page on burning ISOs to DVDs. ** This covers Windows, Mac OS X, and Ubuntu Linux.
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An Ubuntu guide on creating a bootable USB sticks
- You may need to run the following to install the Startup Disk Creator:
$ sudo apt-get install usb-creator-gtk
- Note the option to reserve extra space . This allows you to make persistent changes to the image, for example, installing your favorite packages or program configurations. This is highly recommended!
- You may need to run the following to install the Startup Disk Creator:
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An Arch wiki page on creating USB flash installation media
- This is a very complete guide, which includes details for Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux operating systems, as well as various programs.
- A Gentoo wiki guide on creating a Live USB stick
- UNetBootin - A cross platform tool for creating bootable USB drives.
- USBWriter - A Windows tool for writing bootable images to USB drives.
From the GNU Radio Live SDR Environment wiki page:
"The GNU Radio Live SDR Environment, produced by Corgan Labs, is a bootable Ubuntu Linux DVD with GNU Radio and third party software pre-installed. It is designed for quick and easy testing and experimentation with GNU Radio without having to make any permanent modifications to a PC or laptop. It is not, however, an installation DVD."
The current version (containing GNU Radio 3.7.5), contains bladeRF support from changeset 0bb0cceb.
The FPGA images are included in /usr/share/Nuand/bladeRF
and will be automatically loaded when a device is opened. If you wish to use different FPGA images, you can place them in ~/.config/Nuand/bladeRF/
.
Coming soon...