Advanced settings: default to using username of logged-in user instead of 'pi' Now uses a different method to edit files on the FAT partition to apply advanced settings. Imager now understands the FAT16/FAT32 file system format and can edit files by itself using the raw disk device, withou...
Downloadrpi-imager, on Fedora at least this is actually available as a distro package. It automates getting the latest bootloader and creates a bootable SD image that flashes your rpi4 with it. A sacrificial SD card is needed, if you only have one RPi4 to do, it can be the same one ...
If you are interested in knowing more, please refer to this discussion on how to run a script on first boot and to this file of the rpi-imager repo containing the details on how the configure those settings Usage: rpi-headless-setup-helper advanced [options] create advanced headless setup ...
9. Exit the imager and eject the SD card. 10. Insert the card in the Raspberry Pi, power it on, and it should boot up. There is an option in the configure script that comes up to expand the partitions to use all of the SD card if you have used one larger than 4 GB In ...
Use Disk Utility or an equivalent tool to format a micro SD card to MS-DOS(FAT), download the Raspberry Pi Imager (https://www.raspberrypi.com/software/), open the application, and follow onscreen instructions to flash the OS image obtained in step 1. ...
This is most easily done on a Linux machine of some sort, but it is straightforward on a Windows or Mac box too (for example, by using Etcher, which is a nice, all-in-one cross-platform graphical tool for exactly this purpose - it's free and open-source; or, bzt's usbimager, a...