![]() but all this gives me is a grub> prompt, and I haven't figured out any proper combinations of GRUB4DOS commands to load GRUB2 with a GRUB2 config file - and to add to the confusion, I thought the live CD iso of Kali ran on syslinux. and then once in GRUB4DOS, I have successfully chainloaded GRUB2 (on the kali partition). I'm chainloading GRUB4DOS from the SYSLINUX installed by default via Fatdog64. These errors look like permissions errors, but I can't tell if they affect booting or not (I can troubleshoot other errors later, I'd prefer to keep this question to just multi-boot). ![]() ![]() I have tried copying the files from a mounted iso to sdb3 using Fatdog64 and noticed several errors, mostly in copying the firmware files. Boot direclty to sdb3, chainloading to sdb2 if necessary (not preferred, but an option).Install live Kali onto the USB stick/partition from the Kali distro itself - but this doesn't seem to be an option the same way it is with Fatdog/Puppy/Ubuntu.Kali will boot up and mount your persistent partition for use. One of the options available on that menu is Kali USB Persistence. Kali Linux Install Boot Menu When Kali comes up, it’ll give you a boot menu. So I ask: How do I install Kali onto an existing partition on this USB stick? To try out your USB drive, insert it into your computer and reboot. It seems to me that the best way to do that is to load GRUB4DOS from syslinux (both on sdb2), map sdb3 and chainload to sdb3 from GRUB4DOS. Next I'd like to add chainloading to Kali on sdb3. Currently, sdb2 is bootable (syslinux) and successfully passes to Fatdog and Puppy, both on sdb2. ![]() The objective is to multi-boot Fatdog64, Puppy, and Kali linux. sdb3 is the target partition for Kali to use.sdb2 is bootable and has Fatdog64 (6.3.0) and Precise Puppy (5.7.1) installed (multi-booting from one syslinux menu).sdb1 is FAT32 and the main storage area (so that along with any other OSes).the goal is: 16 GB total, split like this. Let's have my 16GB usb stick mounted as sdb. I'm endeavoring to put Kali linux onto a USB stick - I know it's already written up, but I'd like to use only a portion of the total space (the aforementioned link will use the entire drive space).
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