

Your USB drive’s path will most likely be the last one. Plug in your USB device to your Apple computer’s USB port and run the command diskutil list a second time. You will get a list of the device paths (looking like /dev/disk0, /dev/disk1, etc.) of the disks mounted on your system, along with information on the partitions on each of the disks.ģ. Without the USB drive plugged into the system, open a Terminal window, and type the command diskutil list at the command prompt. Double-check what you’re doing before you do it, it’ll be too late afterwards. WARNING: Although the process of imaging Kali on a USB drive is very easy, you can just as easily overwrite a disk drive you didn’t intend to with dd if you do not understand what you are doing, or if you specify an incorrect output path. Note that the USB drive will have a path similar to /dev/disk2. If you would prefer to use Etcher, then follow the same directions as a Windows user. Once you’ve downloaded and verified your chosen Kali ISO file, you use dd to copy it over to your USB drive. MacOS/OS X is based on UNIX, so creating a bootable Kali Linux USB drive in an macOS/OS X environment is similar to doing it on Linux. Creating a Bootable Kali USB Drive on macOS/OS X (DD) The specifics of this procedure will vary depending on whether you’re doing it on a Windows, Linux, or macOS/OS X system. (Systems with a direct SD card slot can use an SD card with similar capacity. If you’re running under macOS/OS X, you can use the dd command, which is pre-installed on those platforms, or use Etcher.Ī USB thumb drive, 4GB or larger. What You’ll NeedĪ verified copy of the appropriate ISO image of the latest Kali build image for the system you’ll be running it on: see the details on downloading official Kali Linux images. In order to do this, we first need to create a bootable USB drive which has been set up from an ISO image of Kali Linux.

It’s portable - you can carry Kali Linux in your pocket and have it running in minutes on an available system.

It’s non-destructive - it makes no changes to the host system’s hard drive or installed OS, and to go back to normal operations, you simply remove the “Kali Live” USB drive and restart the system.Our favourite way, and the fastest method, for getting up and running with Kali Linux is to run it “live” from a USB drive.
