Figure 7: Etcher flashing the image file to the micro SD card. Start the flashing process by clicking Flash. It's not a bad idea to make a backup ISO file of your SD card from time to time. Figure 6: The micro SD card selected as the target drive. So rather than continually burning SDs every time a new build comes. Any help you can provide would be greatly appreciated. Select the micro SD card you would like to flash to. The image (.iso) is about 1.5gigs and I want to mount it onto a 2gb sd card. I am trying to create the image from a windows computer (not sure if that matters, if there's a windows tool to do said backup), though I do have a Linux subsystem installed on it if the linux command line is the best way to approach it. iso mem card Well, I don't actually know what program to use. I have seen some general Linux backup methods having to do with the dd command but wasn't sure if that would be the best way. ).Īnyway, I thought I'd pop in here and see if someone has done it before or can point me the right direction as to the best way to approach this. This might be a 'general linux' question but I wasn't sure if there was anything special about the original Jetson Nano image that made the process a bit more complex (I remember the first time I burnt the image, something like 13 different drives popped up on my computer.
I am trying to find the best way to create an SD card image backup of my Jetson Nano system (so I can burn the same image again and not have to reinstall all the packages/files if something happens).