
The space designated for keeping the changes.Dedicated to Kali Linux, a complete re-build of BackTrack Linux, adhering completely to Debian development standards with an all-new infrastructure that has been put in place.

All the Updates and extra software you install are saved in The files in the original ISO remains as is in a read only file Read start _ /mnt/my_usb/nfĪ persistent Live USB is essentially a copy of the installation DVD. The following command will, as a short explanation, shrink that block to only be the Kali Live partition. We have to do this from the command line as gparted will read the imaged ISO as a large block. First, let's create the new partition in the empty space above our Kali Live partitions. This can be verified with the command fdisk -l.Ĭreate and format an additional partition on the USB drive. We're going to assume that the two partitions created by the imaging are /dev/sdb1 and /dev/sdb2. In this example, we'll create a new partition to store our persistent data into, starting right above the second Kali Live partition and ending at 7GB, put an ext3 file system onto it, and create a nf file on the new partition.įirst, begin by imaging the latest Kali Linux ISO to your USB drive usingĭd if= of=/dev/sdb bs=4M status=progressĭd if= | pv -s 2.8G | dd of=/dev/sdb bs=4M Of about 4GB to store our persistent data in.


Takes over 3GB, and for this guide, we'll be creating a new partition

You simply created bootable USB by cloning from an iso file onto the device of a USB pendrive. Why I have about only 8Gb of storage on a 64Gb flash drive
