Ive tried to keep it as simple as I could without adding loads of screenies as if it were going to be read by dumb people.Some of the reasons for using a Live USB are: You use all of your system resources (CPU, RAM, GPU, etc) You take no space of your Hard Drive for it.No tunnelling your Internal Wireless Adapter into eth0 You can take your OS to any PC you use.
And you just need a USB flash drive of at least 4 GB with nothing on it to get it, so why not give it a try For this tutorial, Ill assume youre starting from a PC with Windows installed, as most newbies do. Usb Wifi Adapter On Kali Linux Download Page WithinMy program of choice is Universal USB Installer, as its painfully easy to use and it has a direct link to many Linux distros download page within the program. Accept it (or read it first, if you feel like it), and youll be presented with the configuration section (after a few seconds). Choose Kali from the dropdown menu: If you havent downloaded a Kali image yet, just check the Download Link box and youll be taken right into the download page. If your system is 64 bit, you may want the 64 bit ISO, but it doesnt ensure you portability to all the PCs you find. If youre not sure whether your PC is 32 or 64 bit, choose the 32 bit ISO. You can choose Direct download, but if you have a pretty slow and unreliable connection, download it via Torrent. ![]() Thatll wipe your whole USB drive, make sure you back up everything you had there before proceeding. Click on Create, then Yes, and itll do the whole process by itself. The longest part will be extracting the ISO to your USB, but itll be over in a matter of minutes. If everything went as expected, youll see this, and you have a USB you can Live boot you Kali from. ![]() Its way simpler and faster than Windows Make sure you have a 4 GB USB drive connected and youre ready to get it cleaned. Check your USB drive location with sudo fdisk -l Lets say its devsdb and you havent ever partitioned it. Usb Wifi Adapter On Kali Linux Iso Ofdevsdb1 Bs512Just format it to be Fat32 with sudo mkfs.vfat -n Kali -I devsdb1 Locate your Kali image and use it as input in this command: sudo dd ifhomeyoudownloadskali.version.iso ofdevsdb1 bs512 Wait for it to finish, and thats it, you have Kali on your USB drive now. Download MiniTool Partition Wizard Free, install it, run it and then choose Launch Application. Right click on your USB drive, and click on MoveResize Use the small black arrow keys to shrink the partition size. It will leave a bit of storage space free, but if you manually assign the Partition Size, the program may fail. Click OK. A new big grey chunk of unallocated space as appeared Right click on it and click on Create. Itll warn us that Windows wont be able to see that partition, but we dont care about that;) Pick this options: Create as: Primary File System: Ext4 Partition Label: persistence Then click OK. ![]() Choose the option Live USB Persistence, and when its booted up, open a Terminal and use these commands: Determine which partition of your drive youll use fdisk -l Remember your drive had a FAT32 partition and a Ext4 (Linux) one Make a directory on the filesystem to mount your USB mkdir -p mntmyusb Mount the partition on the directory you made (dont click the desktop icon labeled persistence) mount devsdc2 mntmyusb Add a configuration file to enable persistence echo union mntmyusbpersistence.conf Unmount the partition and reboot umount devsdc2 reboot Now, if you boot up to Live USB Persistence, youll be able to save stuff everywhere on your Linux filesystem, and every configuration you make locally will be available everywhere you plug it in:).
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