Img.bz2 To Iso Official
geteltorito -o your_file.iso your_file.img For total control, mount the image and create a fresh ISO:
At first glance, it looks like a problem. You can’t mount it directly, and burning it to a USB drive seems risky. But don’t click away. That little file is actually a that has been compressed with the powerful BZIP2 algorithm. img.bz2 to iso
bunzip2 your_file.img.bz2 Alternatively, to keep the original compressed file: geteltorito -o your_file
Open your terminal and run:
dd if=your_file.img of=your_file.iso bs=2048 If this is a hybrid bootable image (common for Linux ISOs that were saved as .img ), use geteltorito : That little file is actually a that has
Now go forth and mount that mystery image. Have you ever found a weird .img.bz2 file in the wild? What was on it? Let me know in the comments below.
This only works if the .img contains a single filesystem without a partition table.