![]() ![]() We should get the Live Boot menu if all went correctly. We can now complete the setup and boot the VM. We add our Kali Live USB drive and ensure we are set to USB 3.0. Now we navigate to ‘USB’ and we select the USB icon with the green plus. ![]() Next under ‘Processor’ in ‘System’ we will be increasing the processor amount to 2. This is an easy way to test if your bootable USB drive is really. Under ‘Motherboard’ in ‘System’ we will be enabling EFI. You can make QEMU, VMware Server or Oracle VirtualBox boot from the host USB drive. This will ask for confirmation, confirm it and continue. We want to be sure to not create a virtual hard disk. We can continue forward selecting 2GB of memory. Lower I will present the instruction how to do it from Windows host. We can name it whatever we want and select ‘Linux’ as the type and ‘Debian (64-bit)’ as the version. Whatever weird it may seem to you, but you may boot guest OS from USB-drive on VirtualBox. Lets start with a fresh opening of VirtualBox.įrom here we will be creating a new VM. ![]() We can now continue with USB 2.0/3.0 access. From here we navigate to ‘Extensions’ and select box with a green plus and add the pack.Īfter this we will need to be sure to add our account to the vboxusers group if we are on Linux. After downloading this pack we can launch VirtualBox and select ‘Preferences’ under the ‘File’ tab. To get started we first will need to download the Oracle VM VirtualBox Extension Pack. ![]()
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