![]() Assuming you meant a Kali ISO that has been prepared to also be USB boot compatible (as opposed to being bootable in a CD/DVD form only), writing that ISO image into a partition won't work. You said you "put kali on a second contigue partition using dd". Some firmware authors may have included exFAT support anyway, as the UEFI specification allows firmware authors to add filesystem support above and beyond what is required by the specification. ![]() Newer UEFI versions also include other versions of FAT, but as far as I know, exFAT is not among the versions required to be supported. Only FAT32 support is guaranteed across all UEFI versions.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |