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2014-04-20
, 10:27
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Posts: 238 |
Thanked: 131 times |
Joined on May 2011
@ Bulgaria
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#22
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Originally Posted by shawnjefferson
Just an update, I have Kali working pretty well on my n900 in chroot (using the Easy Debian scripts just modified to not interfere with Easy Debian). LXDE works well.
Metasploit works fairly well with postgresql, but the metasploit service pretty much brings the n900 to a crawl.
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2014-04-20
, 17:34
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Posts: 254 |
Thanked: 509 times |
Joined on Nov 2011
@ Canada
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#23
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A dual boot would use less RAM though.
Hi,I think the source you should be taken from here
http://docs.kali.org/armel-armhf/kali-linux-arm-chroot
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2014-04-22
, 14:27
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Posts: 432 |
Thanked: 917 times |
Joined on Jun 2011
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#24
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Those are the instructions I followed to make the image, and a few hints from the Easy Debian thread(s).
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2014-04-23
, 05:26
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Posts: 254 |
Thanked: 509 times |
Joined on Nov 2011
@ Canada
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#25
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2014-04-24
, 13:50
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Posts: 432 |
Thanked: 917 times |
Joined on Jun 2011
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#26
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It's about 5GB... I had to put it on an ext3 partition on my sdcard, as MyDocs is FAT32 which only allows 4GB files.
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2014-08-08
, 21:06
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Posts: 3 |
Thanked: 5 times |
Joined on Jul 2014
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#28
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2014-08-14
, 08:53
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Posts: 391 |
Thanked: 912 times |
Joined on Aug 2011
@ suncity
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#29
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Here's how to run Kali in a Root - Information gleaned from the Easy-Debian thread -
Construct a rootfs according to the Kali Documentation
- http://docs.kali.org/armel-armhf/kali-linux-arm-chroot
tar up your rootfs
Download both easy-chroot and easy-deb-chroot from the repos on to your N900
create a partition on your EMMC or SD card, and copy the rootfs to that partition (minus the container folder (/kali-armel/)
edit the .chroot (nano /home/user/.chroot) and delete the # before one of #IMGFILE (ex: IMGFILE=/dev/mmcblk1p3)
set the IMGFS= (whatever the Filesystem of your partition - ex. IMGFS=ext3)
set the mount point to a folder you created -
ex. I set my mount point in root to /.kali/ -
CHROOT=/.kali
save the edits in .chroot
go back out of the Terminal and click on Debian Chroot icon. The script should automatically run, and mount your image partition.
Alternately, you can use a .img instead of a partition, but I feel the partition is preferred due to not having to worry about image size.
Congratulations! Your Kali Chroot is now mounted!
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2014-08-15
, 15:58
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Posts: 3 |
Thanked: 5 times |
Joined on Jul 2014
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#30
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Hi zeriniel,
I have a question: do I have to make my own kali image, or it is enough to download the one placed on kali website (1.0.8 armel image)?
Thanks,
jm
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Saera: A Siri clone for the N900, N9(50) and Jolla
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