DD command is not working as intended

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP








up vote
2
down vote

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So i tried using this DD command to transfer my USB, ISO file og the Ubuntu download over to my SSD. I did this because i couldn't find my SSD but only my HDD before when i tried to install Ubuntu. As you see on the picture, i've runned this for 10 minutes without any results or even a Byte getting transfered. I cannot access the browser on the desktop, which is why the picture is there. I hope you can identify it enough.



Picture of my Terminal Emulation



enter image description here







share|improve this question






















  • Update! 30 minutes has now passed, still without any positive results... Shutting it down.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:45










  • You're going to wipe out your NVMe SSD trying to use dd to copy an .iso that way. Hopefully the command has failed.
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 15 at 17:47










  • @wineunuuchs2Unix This would be the happy ending. My intentions are to wipe the ssd and only keep the installation file.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:49










  • You want to turn a $500 NVMe SSD into a $10 installation USB pen drive?
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 15 at 17:51










  • @wineunuuchs2Unix no but to erase the content of the SSD to have the content of the USB pen drive.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:52














up vote
2
down vote

favorite












So i tried using this DD command to transfer my USB, ISO file og the Ubuntu download over to my SSD. I did this because i couldn't find my SSD but only my HDD before when i tried to install Ubuntu. As you see on the picture, i've runned this for 10 minutes without any results or even a Byte getting transfered. I cannot access the browser on the desktop, which is why the picture is there. I hope you can identify it enough.



Picture of my Terminal Emulation



enter image description here







share|improve this question






















  • Update! 30 minutes has now passed, still without any positive results... Shutting it down.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:45










  • You're going to wipe out your NVMe SSD trying to use dd to copy an .iso that way. Hopefully the command has failed.
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 15 at 17:47










  • @wineunuuchs2Unix This would be the happy ending. My intentions are to wipe the ssd and only keep the installation file.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:49










  • You want to turn a $500 NVMe SSD into a $10 installation USB pen drive?
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 15 at 17:51










  • @wineunuuchs2Unix no but to erase the content of the SSD to have the content of the USB pen drive.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:52












up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











So i tried using this DD command to transfer my USB, ISO file og the Ubuntu download over to my SSD. I did this because i couldn't find my SSD but only my HDD before when i tried to install Ubuntu. As you see on the picture, i've runned this for 10 minutes without any results or even a Byte getting transfered. I cannot access the browser on the desktop, which is why the picture is there. I hope you can identify it enough.



Picture of my Terminal Emulation



enter image description here







share|improve this question














So i tried using this DD command to transfer my USB, ISO file og the Ubuntu download over to my SSD. I did this because i couldn't find my SSD but only my HDD before when i tried to install Ubuntu. As you see on the picture, i've runned this for 10 minutes without any results or even a Byte getting transfered. I cannot access the browser on the desktop, which is why the picture is there. I hope you can identify it enough.



Picture of my Terminal Emulation



enter image description here









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 16 at 18:33









user68186

14.2k84360




14.2k84360










asked May 15 at 17:41









Pottepl4nt3n1055

155




155











  • Update! 30 minutes has now passed, still without any positive results... Shutting it down.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:45










  • You're going to wipe out your NVMe SSD trying to use dd to copy an .iso that way. Hopefully the command has failed.
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 15 at 17:47










  • @wineunuuchs2Unix This would be the happy ending. My intentions are to wipe the ssd and only keep the installation file.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:49










  • You want to turn a $500 NVMe SSD into a $10 installation USB pen drive?
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 15 at 17:51










  • @wineunuuchs2Unix no but to erase the content of the SSD to have the content of the USB pen drive.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:52
















  • Update! 30 minutes has now passed, still without any positive results... Shutting it down.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:45










  • You're going to wipe out your NVMe SSD trying to use dd to copy an .iso that way. Hopefully the command has failed.
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 15 at 17:47










  • @wineunuuchs2Unix This would be the happy ending. My intentions are to wipe the ssd and only keep the installation file.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:49










  • You want to turn a $500 NVMe SSD into a $10 installation USB pen drive?
    – WinEunuuchs2Unix
    May 15 at 17:51










  • @wineunuuchs2Unix no but to erase the content of the SSD to have the content of the USB pen drive.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 17:52















Update! 30 minutes has now passed, still without any positive results... Shutting it down.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 17:45




Update! 30 minutes has now passed, still without any positive results... Shutting it down.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 17:45












You're going to wipe out your NVMe SSD trying to use dd to copy an .iso that way. Hopefully the command has failed.
– WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 15 at 17:47




You're going to wipe out your NVMe SSD trying to use dd to copy an .iso that way. Hopefully the command has failed.
– WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 15 at 17:47












@wineunuuchs2Unix This would be the happy ending. My intentions are to wipe the ssd and only keep the installation file.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 17:49




@wineunuuchs2Unix This would be the happy ending. My intentions are to wipe the ssd and only keep the installation file.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 17:49












You want to turn a $500 NVMe SSD into a $10 installation USB pen drive?
– WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 15 at 17:51




You want to turn a $500 NVMe SSD into a $10 installation USB pen drive?
– WinEunuuchs2Unix
May 15 at 17:51












@wineunuuchs2Unix no but to erase the content of the SSD to have the content of the USB pen drive.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 17:52




@wineunuuchs2Unix no but to erase the content of the SSD to have the content of the USB pen drive.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 17:52










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
1
down vote



accepted










  • You can install Ubuntu alongside Windows (at least in normal drives)


  • If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten. You will not see it, so only if you want to erase all traces because of security reasons, you need to wipe the whole drive



  • Seeing your picture, I think your command line is bad, after pv you should redirect to the target device, not pipe via sudo.



    • It is easier to do after sudo -i with dd and pv, but it is risky. A minor typing error is enough to damage valuable data in a device (drive), that you did not intend to touch.



    • It is safer (and easy) to use mkusb-dus, which can clone from a device to another device. There is a final checkpoint, that helps you check once again, that you will write to the intended device, and not another device. After installing mkusb, assuming the source device /dev/sdb, you run



      dus /dev/sdb


      and you will be guided via menus to select the correct target device.








share|improve this answer






















  • "If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten" But will i be able to boot from it then? And thanks for an answer mate.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:14











  • An Ubuntu (or Ubuntu community flavour) iso file will make a bootable drive, when cloned to a mass storage device (USB pendrive, memory card, HDD, SSD ...) and DVD disk. 64-bit systems can boot in BIOS (legacy) mode as well as in UEFI mode. But you will destroy the previous system, so if you want to keep Windows, you had better do something else than you ask for, for example shrink the Windows partition (using Windows tools), clone to a USB pendrive, boot from it and install Ubuntu alongside Windows (in the unallocaded space created, when you shrank Windows).
    – sudodus
    May 15 at 19:28











  • i don't wanna save anything from the last, having it dosen't bother me. But neither will it stand in the way so erasing it is no problem for me. i just cloned the ISO file over to my SSD, and tried to boot from it. only black screen apeared until i shutted down my desktop and booted from the USB again. I have no idea how to make my SSD bootable.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:31










  • Please tell us about your computer: brand name and model and also about your graphics chip/card, brand name and model. Are you sure that your computer is really trying to boot from the SSD? Can you boot from an external drive (typically a USB pendrive)? -- There is another problem with cloning. In order to work (well), the physical sectors of the source and target should be the same. Use sudo parted -ls to find the physical sector sizes.
    – sudodus
    May 15 at 19:37







  • 1




    Tried unplugging the graphic card. No changed result. But i have noticed that whenever i start my computer it keeps starting up and then shutting down after 3 seconds repeating this process over and over. I then hold the power button turning it off. and turn it on to get the "fail accured" BIOS screen.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:53











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
1
down vote



accepted










  • You can install Ubuntu alongside Windows (at least in normal drives)


  • If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten. You will not see it, so only if you want to erase all traces because of security reasons, you need to wipe the whole drive



  • Seeing your picture, I think your command line is bad, after pv you should redirect to the target device, not pipe via sudo.



    • It is easier to do after sudo -i with dd and pv, but it is risky. A minor typing error is enough to damage valuable data in a device (drive), that you did not intend to touch.



    • It is safer (and easy) to use mkusb-dus, which can clone from a device to another device. There is a final checkpoint, that helps you check once again, that you will write to the intended device, and not another device. After installing mkusb, assuming the source device /dev/sdb, you run



      dus /dev/sdb


      and you will be guided via menus to select the correct target device.








share|improve this answer






















  • "If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten" But will i be able to boot from it then? And thanks for an answer mate.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:14











  • An Ubuntu (or Ubuntu community flavour) iso file will make a bootable drive, when cloned to a mass storage device (USB pendrive, memory card, HDD, SSD ...) and DVD disk. 64-bit systems can boot in BIOS (legacy) mode as well as in UEFI mode. But you will destroy the previous system, so if you want to keep Windows, you had better do something else than you ask for, for example shrink the Windows partition (using Windows tools), clone to a USB pendrive, boot from it and install Ubuntu alongside Windows (in the unallocaded space created, when you shrank Windows).
    – sudodus
    May 15 at 19:28











  • i don't wanna save anything from the last, having it dosen't bother me. But neither will it stand in the way so erasing it is no problem for me. i just cloned the ISO file over to my SSD, and tried to boot from it. only black screen apeared until i shutted down my desktop and booted from the USB again. I have no idea how to make my SSD bootable.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:31










  • Please tell us about your computer: brand name and model and also about your graphics chip/card, brand name and model. Are you sure that your computer is really trying to boot from the SSD? Can you boot from an external drive (typically a USB pendrive)? -- There is another problem with cloning. In order to work (well), the physical sectors of the source and target should be the same. Use sudo parted -ls to find the physical sector sizes.
    – sudodus
    May 15 at 19:37







  • 1




    Tried unplugging the graphic card. No changed result. But i have noticed that whenever i start my computer it keeps starting up and then shutting down after 3 seconds repeating this process over and over. I then hold the power button turning it off. and turn it on to get the "fail accured" BIOS screen.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:53















up vote
1
down vote



accepted










  • You can install Ubuntu alongside Windows (at least in normal drives)


  • If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten. You will not see it, so only if you want to erase all traces because of security reasons, you need to wipe the whole drive



  • Seeing your picture, I think your command line is bad, after pv you should redirect to the target device, not pipe via sudo.



    • It is easier to do after sudo -i with dd and pv, but it is risky. A minor typing error is enough to damage valuable data in a device (drive), that you did not intend to touch.



    • It is safer (and easy) to use mkusb-dus, which can clone from a device to another device. There is a final checkpoint, that helps you check once again, that you will write to the intended device, and not another device. After installing mkusb, assuming the source device /dev/sdb, you run



      dus /dev/sdb


      and you will be guided via menus to select the correct target device.








share|improve this answer






















  • "If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten" But will i be able to boot from it then? And thanks for an answer mate.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:14











  • An Ubuntu (or Ubuntu community flavour) iso file will make a bootable drive, when cloned to a mass storage device (USB pendrive, memory card, HDD, SSD ...) and DVD disk. 64-bit systems can boot in BIOS (legacy) mode as well as in UEFI mode. But you will destroy the previous system, so if you want to keep Windows, you had better do something else than you ask for, for example shrink the Windows partition (using Windows tools), clone to a USB pendrive, boot from it and install Ubuntu alongside Windows (in the unallocaded space created, when you shrank Windows).
    – sudodus
    May 15 at 19:28











  • i don't wanna save anything from the last, having it dosen't bother me. But neither will it stand in the way so erasing it is no problem for me. i just cloned the ISO file over to my SSD, and tried to boot from it. only black screen apeared until i shutted down my desktop and booted from the USB again. I have no idea how to make my SSD bootable.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:31










  • Please tell us about your computer: brand name and model and also about your graphics chip/card, brand name and model. Are you sure that your computer is really trying to boot from the SSD? Can you boot from an external drive (typically a USB pendrive)? -- There is another problem with cloning. In order to work (well), the physical sectors of the source and target should be the same. Use sudo parted -ls to find the physical sector sizes.
    – sudodus
    May 15 at 19:37







  • 1




    Tried unplugging the graphic card. No changed result. But i have noticed that whenever i start my computer it keeps starting up and then shutting down after 3 seconds repeating this process over and over. I then hold the power button turning it off. and turn it on to get the "fail accured" BIOS screen.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:53













up vote
1
down vote



accepted







up vote
1
down vote



accepted






  • You can install Ubuntu alongside Windows (at least in normal drives)


  • If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten. You will not see it, so only if you want to erase all traces because of security reasons, you need to wipe the whole drive



  • Seeing your picture, I think your command line is bad, after pv you should redirect to the target device, not pipe via sudo.



    • It is easier to do after sudo -i with dd and pv, but it is risky. A minor typing error is enough to damage valuable data in a device (drive), that you did not intend to touch.



    • It is safer (and easy) to use mkusb-dus, which can clone from a device to another device. There is a final checkpoint, that helps you check once again, that you will write to the intended device, and not another device. After installing mkusb, assuming the source device /dev/sdb, you run



      dus /dev/sdb


      and you will be guided via menus to select the correct target device.








share|improve this answer














  • You can install Ubuntu alongside Windows (at least in normal drives)


  • If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten. You will not see it, so only if you want to erase all traces because of security reasons, you need to wipe the whole drive



  • Seeing your picture, I think your command line is bad, after pv you should redirect to the target device, not pipe via sudo.



    • It is easier to do after sudo -i with dd and pv, but it is risky. A minor typing error is enough to damage valuable data in a device (drive), that you did not intend to touch.



    • It is safer (and easy) to use mkusb-dus, which can clone from a device to another device. There is a final checkpoint, that helps you check once again, that you will write to the intended device, and not another device. After installing mkusb, assuming the source device /dev/sdb, you run



      dus /dev/sdb


      and you will be guided via menus to select the correct target device.









share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited May 16 at 18:58

























answered May 15 at 19:07









sudodus

19.9k32666




19.9k32666











  • "If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten" But will i be able to boot from it then? And thanks for an answer mate.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:14











  • An Ubuntu (or Ubuntu community flavour) iso file will make a bootable drive, when cloned to a mass storage device (USB pendrive, memory card, HDD, SSD ...) and DVD disk. 64-bit systems can boot in BIOS (legacy) mode as well as in UEFI mode. But you will destroy the previous system, so if you want to keep Windows, you had better do something else than you ask for, for example shrink the Windows partition (using Windows tools), clone to a USB pendrive, boot from it and install Ubuntu alongside Windows (in the unallocaded space created, when you shrank Windows).
    – sudodus
    May 15 at 19:28











  • i don't wanna save anything from the last, having it dosen't bother me. But neither will it stand in the way so erasing it is no problem for me. i just cloned the ISO file over to my SSD, and tried to boot from it. only black screen apeared until i shutted down my desktop and booted from the USB again. I have no idea how to make my SSD bootable.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:31










  • Please tell us about your computer: brand name and model and also about your graphics chip/card, brand name and model. Are you sure that your computer is really trying to boot from the SSD? Can you boot from an external drive (typically a USB pendrive)? -- There is another problem with cloning. In order to work (well), the physical sectors of the source and target should be the same. Use sudo parted -ls to find the physical sector sizes.
    – sudodus
    May 15 at 19:37







  • 1




    Tried unplugging the graphic card. No changed result. But i have noticed that whenever i start my computer it keeps starting up and then shutting down after 3 seconds repeating this process over and over. I then hold the power button turning it off. and turn it on to get the "fail accured" BIOS screen.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:53

















  • "If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten" But will i be able to boot from it then? And thanks for an answer mate.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:14











  • An Ubuntu (or Ubuntu community flavour) iso file will make a bootable drive, when cloned to a mass storage device (USB pendrive, memory card, HDD, SSD ...) and DVD disk. 64-bit systems can boot in BIOS (legacy) mode as well as in UEFI mode. But you will destroy the previous system, so if you want to keep Windows, you had better do something else than you ask for, for example shrink the Windows partition (using Windows tools), clone to a USB pendrive, boot from it and install Ubuntu alongside Windows (in the unallocaded space created, when you shrank Windows).
    – sudodus
    May 15 at 19:28











  • i don't wanna save anything from the last, having it dosen't bother me. But neither will it stand in the way so erasing it is no problem for me. i just cloned the ISO file over to my SSD, and tried to boot from it. only black screen apeared until i shutted down my desktop and booted from the USB again. I have no idea how to make my SSD bootable.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:31










  • Please tell us about your computer: brand name and model and also about your graphics chip/card, brand name and model. Are you sure that your computer is really trying to boot from the SSD? Can you boot from an external drive (typically a USB pendrive)? -- There is another problem with cloning. In order to work (well), the physical sectors of the source and target should be the same. Use sudo parted -ls to find the physical sector sizes.
    – sudodus
    May 15 at 19:37







  • 1




    Tried unplugging the graphic card. No changed result. But i have noticed that whenever i start my computer it keeps starting up and then shutting down after 3 seconds repeating this process over and over. I then hold the power button turning it off. and turn it on to get the "fail accured" BIOS screen.
    – Pottepl4nt3n1055
    May 15 at 19:53
















"If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten" But will i be able to boot from it then? And thanks for an answer mate.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 19:14





"If you clone a drive, the previous partition table, file system and some of the content will be overwritten" But will i be able to boot from it then? And thanks for an answer mate.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 19:14













An Ubuntu (or Ubuntu community flavour) iso file will make a bootable drive, when cloned to a mass storage device (USB pendrive, memory card, HDD, SSD ...) and DVD disk. 64-bit systems can boot in BIOS (legacy) mode as well as in UEFI mode. But you will destroy the previous system, so if you want to keep Windows, you had better do something else than you ask for, for example shrink the Windows partition (using Windows tools), clone to a USB pendrive, boot from it and install Ubuntu alongside Windows (in the unallocaded space created, when you shrank Windows).
– sudodus
May 15 at 19:28





An Ubuntu (or Ubuntu community flavour) iso file will make a bootable drive, when cloned to a mass storage device (USB pendrive, memory card, HDD, SSD ...) and DVD disk. 64-bit systems can boot in BIOS (legacy) mode as well as in UEFI mode. But you will destroy the previous system, so if you want to keep Windows, you had better do something else than you ask for, for example shrink the Windows partition (using Windows tools), clone to a USB pendrive, boot from it and install Ubuntu alongside Windows (in the unallocaded space created, when you shrank Windows).
– sudodus
May 15 at 19:28













i don't wanna save anything from the last, having it dosen't bother me. But neither will it stand in the way so erasing it is no problem for me. i just cloned the ISO file over to my SSD, and tried to boot from it. only black screen apeared until i shutted down my desktop and booted from the USB again. I have no idea how to make my SSD bootable.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 19:31




i don't wanna save anything from the last, having it dosen't bother me. But neither will it stand in the way so erasing it is no problem for me. i just cloned the ISO file over to my SSD, and tried to boot from it. only black screen apeared until i shutted down my desktop and booted from the USB again. I have no idea how to make my SSD bootable.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 19:31












Please tell us about your computer: brand name and model and also about your graphics chip/card, brand name and model. Are you sure that your computer is really trying to boot from the SSD? Can you boot from an external drive (typically a USB pendrive)? -- There is another problem with cloning. In order to work (well), the physical sectors of the source and target should be the same. Use sudo parted -ls to find the physical sector sizes.
– sudodus
May 15 at 19:37





Please tell us about your computer: brand name and model and also about your graphics chip/card, brand name and model. Are you sure that your computer is really trying to boot from the SSD? Can you boot from an external drive (typically a USB pendrive)? -- There is another problem with cloning. In order to work (well), the physical sectors of the source and target should be the same. Use sudo parted -ls to find the physical sector sizes.
– sudodus
May 15 at 19:37





1




1




Tried unplugging the graphic card. No changed result. But i have noticed that whenever i start my computer it keeps starting up and then shutting down after 3 seconds repeating this process over and over. I then hold the power button turning it off. and turn it on to get the "fail accured" BIOS screen.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 19:53





Tried unplugging the graphic card. No changed result. But i have noticed that whenever i start my computer it keeps starting up and then shutting down after 3 seconds repeating this process over and over. I then hold the power button turning it off. and turn it on to get the "fail accured" BIOS screen.
– Pottepl4nt3n1055
May 15 at 19:53













 

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