Due to the lack of support for newer Mac OS’s on older Mac Minis, I opted to wipe my mac and install Ubuntu over it. This was a nightmare to finally find a method that works, as the standard documentation from the Ubuntu website did not apply to my machine. Finally I got it installed after picking up some tips from a few forums. Below are the steps I went through to get this working.
Brief overview
To boot Ubuntu from USB media, the process is very similar to the Windows instructions above. Confirm the BIOS boot sequence lists the USB drive first, or make that change as needed. After the USB flash drive is inserted into the USB port, press the Power button for your machine (or Restart if the computer is running).
After you have got your installer media, you can use ubunut's built-in utility Startup Disk Creator to make a bootable USB. SO, open dash and search for Startup Disk Creator and open it. Follow the on-screen instructions or refer to this document from ubuntu. Aug 04, 2016 Ubuntu installation Shut down your Mac, insert the installer USB stick and power on the machine while holding “option” or “alt” key until the boot menu appears. You should see something like this. Opening it will bring you to the Standard Ubuntu boot menu, where you can choose Try Ubuntu to launch a live image. Method 3: Creating a Bootable USB Drive from Ubuntu. If you’re already on Ubuntu, you don’t need a Windows or Mac computer to create a bootable USB drive with Ubuntu – you can do it straight from your current OS. May 23, 2017 You’ll see the boot options menu appear. Select the connected USB drive. The Mac will boot the Linux system from the connected USB drive. If your Mac just boots to the login screen and you don’t see the boot options menu, reboot your Mac again and hold down the Option key earlier in the boot process. This solution will allow you to boot common Linux USB drives on your Mac. You can just boot and use them normally without modifying your system.
My Mac Mini has a busted Superdrive, so booting from a DVD wasn’t an option. Creating Bootable USB drives using standard methods on the Ubuntu website didn’t seem to work either. Finally I came across this blog post which refers to a super easy method for making bootable USB drives that comes from some German forums. I tried this with a 64-bit Ubuntu ISO, but no luck and I had this same issue which revealed that 2007 mac minis don’t support
x86_64-efi
(64-bit EFI booting). Following this, I used a 32-bit installation of Ubuntu along with the 32-bit EFI loader
from the German package to boot from USB, and everything seemed to work fine. Once the Ubuntu Live USB booted up, I had one more minor issue where the boot loader failed to install, but I just selected don't install boot loader
, completed the installation, then manually installed the boot loader using the boot-repair
tool as seen in this thread. Following this, my 32-bit Ubunutu install booted with no issues. Finally, using Unetbootin
within my new 32-bit Ubuntu installation, I made a Frugal Install of a 64-bit Ubuntu Live ISO which I could then boot from the hard drive, allowing me to install a 64-bit version of Ubuntu and then dual-boot into into either one.To summarize this all up… I made a 32-bit bootable USB drive which installed a 32-bit version of Ubuntu along with the GRUB launcher. Using unetbootin inside the 32-bit Ubuntu, I then made a bootable partition on my hard disk from a 64-bit Ubuntu ISO which could then be booted from the GRUB. This allowed me to boot and install a 64-bit version of Ubuntu without a DVD drive. Major kudos to all the authors and contributors in the mentioned blogs and threads for paving the way for this to work. I spent days sifting through message boards and this was the only method that worked for me. Below are the detailed steps I took to get this working.
Make bootable USB (32-bit)
- Download the obscure German USB creator from here.
- Format a USB stick to
FAT32
and manauly create the folder structureefi/boot/
inside of it. - Copy a
32-bit Ubuntu install ISO
(I used 14.04 desktop) and the filebootIA32.efi
from the german package into the/efi/boot
directory you just created. - Rename your
32-bit Ubuntu install ISO
you just copied toboot.iso
- Your USB drive should now look like this: (image taken from my chormebook, the drive is named UNTITLED)
- Thats it! Now when you restart and hold down
Alt
, you can select the USB from the list of boot options, no Refit install required. The instructions are similar to this post, with the exception that we’re using the filebootIA32.efi
instead ofbootX64.efi
, which I tried earlier with both 32 and 64 bit Unbuntu install disks, but it didn’t work.
Install the 32-bit version of Ubuntu
Now you can go through the Ubuntu install once the Live USB has booted. I chose to Erase disk and install Ubuntu and let Ubuntu automatically create the new partitions needed and I chose not to use LVM (the default option), as this causes confusion later on when trying to re-partition your drives. At some point, I got an error which is something like Could not create boot loader in specified partition, please choose location to install boot loader. None of the available locations worked for me, so I chose
Continue without a boot loader
.This isn’t quite as scary as it sounds, as you can still boot into your live USB if you restart without the boot loader having to be installed. However, after the installation finished, and before restarting for the first time, I followed these suggestions and installed and ran the
boot-repair
utility. The steps are below:- After Ubuntu install has finished (and you have selected to Continue without a boot loader), open the terminal and type the following:
- The final command will open the
boot-repair
tool for you. It’ll automatically scan your computer and suggest repairs. PressRecommended repair
- I selected
No RAID
when the option asked me if RAID was installed on my hard drive - I then opted to uninstall any previous GRUB loader and reinstall a fresh one. You’ll have to do some copy and pasting into the terminal, but the instructions are very clear within the installer.
- Install the new GRUB into the disk where Ubuntu is.
- Done! After restarting without the bootable USB drive, it goes straight into the GRUB loader and you can launch Ubuntu! (If you messed up a step and GRUB isn’t working, you can always just reinsert your bootable USB, restart the computer, then rerun the
boot-repair
app)
Install a 64-bit version of Ubuntu
Now that you have a working 32-bit version of Ubuntu, you can use
Unetbootin
to create a bootable partition on your hard disk to launch the 64-bit Live CD from.- First, you must make sure you have enough free space to install the 64-bit version of Ubuntu. I just booted from the 32-bit live USB again, then used
gparted
to resize my partitions. Because we’ll be loading the 64-bit live CD from the hard disk, we cannot resize this partition during the installation, as the disk will be in use. I resized my 32-bit installation to a 20GB partition. To rungparted
from the Live USB, use the following command in the terminal:sudo gparted
- If you selected LVM (Logical Volume Management) when installing the 32-bit Ubuntu, you won’t be able to use
gparted
for this. You’ll have to do some fancy command line partitioning, as the LVM system works very differently, and there are not really any reliable GUI tools to do this.
- Now restart your computer and enter the 32-bit Ubuntu you just resized in the previous step. Here we’ll install
UNetbootin
, which will be used to create a bootable partition.sudo apt-get install unetbootin
- Use
UNetbootin
to create a bootable partition from the64-bit Live CD
with the following settings:- Distribution:
Ubuntu - 14.04_Live_x64
- Type:
Hard Disk
- Drive:
/
- Distribution:
- After the partition is created, reboot the computer when prompted to do so and select
UNetbootin
from the GRUB options and this will take you into the 64-bit Live CD.
Launch the
64-bit Ubuntu Live ISO
from the bootable partition and then install it along side your 32-bit install. All I had to do was select the free space in the partition step of the installation and create a new ext4
partition from it with the mount point
set as /
. The swap space
from the previous 32-bit install will be reused for the 64-bit install, so u don’t need to create a new one. Again in the installer, select Continue without boot loader
option if the error comes up and install and run the boot-repair
utility after to get the GRUB working right. By the end, you should have both 32 and 64 bit versions of Ubuntu dual booting on your system.Final comments
All these steps worked for me, and I was dual booting both versions of Ubuntu
If anything is unclear here, you can check the links to the blogs and threads I posted above (and again here down below). The method described here was a mix-and-match between these four sources:
- Making a Bootable USB drive for old Mac Mini: Really good instructions on how to make a bootable USB using the obscure German forums method.
- x86_64-efi not supported error when trying to boot from USB on mac: The explanation on why the
x86_64-efi
boot loader wont work on pre-2008 Mac Minis. - How to manually create a boot loader with boot-repair in Ubuntu: This tells how you can complete the Unbuntu installation when the boot loader fails to install correctly.
- Make bootable partition: You can use the frugal install section of this guide to make a bootable partition that launches the 64-bit Ubuntu Live ISO.
Macbooks or iMacs hardly require reinstallation of their Mac OS, but when they do then it’s a fairly difficult process especially if your secondary computer is Windows. Reinstalling Mac OS is a time-consuming process and requires a lot of patience that’s why recommend doing this process in your free time or weekends.
To get started with you require a USB drive with at least 8GB storage (16GB recommended). Then you need a working Mac OS ISO or DMG Installation Image. You can download it from the Apps Store or you can find Mac OS Image at ISORIVER.
Making Ubuntu Usb Boot
There are 2 Methods to Create a Bootable USB drive of Mac OS on your Windows PC.
Method 1: Using TransMac
- Download TransMac’s latest version for Windows from this link.
- Connect your USB drive
- Right Click on your USB drive option in TransMac and select Format Disk for Mac
- After that, right-click the USB Drive and select Restore with Disk Image
- Point to your Mac OS .dmg or .iso file by clicking the add button.
- After that TransMac will create bootable Mac OS USB within few minutes.
- Then you can insert it into your Mac, hold down the option key while turn on and boot your system with this USB.
Method 2: Using PowerISO
Another disk image utility that you can use is PowerISO. It can be used for burning both ISO files and DMG files to USB to create a bootable drive. Follow the steps below to Create a Bootable Mac OS USB on Windows PC.
Step 1: Firstly Download PowerISO and install it in your Windows PC. Launch the app and insert a USB drive into your computer.
Step 2: Import the DMG / ISO file directly by clicking on ‘Burn’ in the toolbar.
Step 3: In the Burn window, select the DMG / ISO file from the Source File section.
Step 4: You can modify the settings to adjust burn speed. The default will be set to the maximum, so you can reduce that.
Step 5: You can choose to finalize the disk and verify it. Any errors in the bootable USB will show up at that point.
Step 6: Now click on “Burn” and wait for the progress bar to reach 100%.
After the successful creation of Bootable Mac OS USB, boot your Macbook from this USB drive by clicking the option button during bootup and select this USB drive.
Create Ubuntu Bootable Usb Mac
Watch this Video Tutorial
Ubuntu Usb Boot For Mac Usb
That’s it for the tutorial If you face any issues or had any query then please let us know in the comment section below. You can also send us an email via the contact us page for personalized support.