Compile the Samsung Chromium Kernel and Modules :~$ gdisk kali-custom-chrome.img root/etc/nf :~$ parted kali-custom-chrome.img -script - mktable gpt Partition and Mount the Image File :~$ parted kali-custom-chrome.img -script - mklabel msdos :~$ dd if=/dev/zero of=kali-custom-chrome.img conv=fsync bs=4M count=7000Ġ3. Next, we create the physical image file that will hold our Chromebook rootfs and boot images: :~$ sudo apt install -y kpartx xz-utils gdisk uboot-mkimage u-boot-tools vboot-kernel-utils vboot-utils cgpt By the end of this process, you should have a populated rootfs directory in ~/arm-stuff/rootfs/kali-armhf. Start by building a Kali rootfs as described in our Kali documentation, using an armhf architecture. You’ll need to have root privileges to do this procedure, or the ability to escalate your privileges with the command “sudo su”.
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