Can't install Kali Linux from USB, fails to find CD-ROM drive Announcing the arrival of Valued...

A letter with no particular backstory

Dyck paths with extra diagonals from valleys (Laser construction)

Sliceness of knots

What is an "asse" in Elizabethan English?

How can I prevent/balance waiting and turtling as a response to cooldown mechanics

Does the Mueller report show a conspiracy between Russia and the Trump Campaign?

Intuitive explanation of the rank-nullity theorem

Project Euler #1 in C++

Tannaka duality for semisimple groups

Semigroups with no morphisms between them

AppleTVs create a chatty alternate WiFi network

What does it mean that physics no longer uses mechanical models to describe phenomena?

How to report t statistic from R

How would a mousetrap for use in space work?

What does 丫 mean? 丫是什么意思?

Is the IBM 5153 color display compatible with the Tandy 1000 16 color modes?

Is there public access to the Meteor Crater in Arizona?

What are the discoveries that have been possible with the rejection of positivism?

Misunderstanding of Sylow theory

What would you call this weird metallic apparatus that allows you to lift people?

Google .dev domain strangely redirects to https

How to compare two different files line by line in unix?

Sentence with dass with three Verbs (One modal and two connected with zu)

Can a Beast Master ranger change beast companions?



Can't install Kali Linux from USB, fails to find CD-ROM drive



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)Installing Kali Linux, stuck at “Detect and mount CD-Rom”Kali Linux Installation errorInstall Kali Linux 2016.2Lost boot from the hard drive after installing kali linuxKali linux throws ' isolinux.bin missing or corrupt ' error using USB 3.0live boot usb wont boot with grub 2.0 installed on my kali linux sana 2.0Kali - Live Session has no Install Kali applicationKali won't boot without USB flash driveI can't install Windows and Linux through usbMultiboot USB Kali Installation CD-ROM Mount Errorkali linux amd64 live usb did not ask for user name and pswdFailed to install Kali Linux by USB driveHow to get usb to work on Virtual Box Kali Linux





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ height:90px;width:728px;box-sizing:border-box;
}







43















I successfully made a live USB of the Kali Linux.



When I boot from the USB it gives an option to install. I clicked on that option. At one point it was detecting and mounting CD-ROM drives. As I have no CD-drive or any ROM-drive on my laptop, it gives an error




Can't mount and detect CD-ROM drives.




I tried the "live something" option that takes me directly to Kali Linux and it loads successfully but I can't install it permanently. I want to install it so I won't have to waste my time plugging and unplugging the USB.



How to get past the CD-ROM detection and make the installation finish correctly?










share|improve this question

























  • 1. How did you create USB installation? I did it using program unetbootin many times and never had any problems. It works with Kali 2.0 without any problems. 2. Did you try to use expert install option? Usually in expert install mode you can skip certain steps by moving to next one in the menu/installation agenda.

    – mnmnc
    Aug 26 '15 at 9:56











  • i did it with rufus there is no probem in making usb but it gives that error

    – Usman Zia Malik
    Aug 26 '15 at 14:13











  • See the point no 2 in my previous comment. Kali is based on Debian so it has the same installer. Try to use expert install and skip CDROM step.

    – mnmnc
    Aug 26 '15 at 14:33


















43















I successfully made a live USB of the Kali Linux.



When I boot from the USB it gives an option to install. I clicked on that option. At one point it was detecting and mounting CD-ROM drives. As I have no CD-drive or any ROM-drive on my laptop, it gives an error




Can't mount and detect CD-ROM drives.




I tried the "live something" option that takes me directly to Kali Linux and it loads successfully but I can't install it permanently. I want to install it so I won't have to waste my time plugging and unplugging the USB.



How to get past the CD-ROM detection and make the installation finish correctly?










share|improve this question

























  • 1. How did you create USB installation? I did it using program unetbootin many times and never had any problems. It works with Kali 2.0 without any problems. 2. Did you try to use expert install option? Usually in expert install mode you can skip certain steps by moving to next one in the menu/installation agenda.

    – mnmnc
    Aug 26 '15 at 9:56











  • i did it with rufus there is no probem in making usb but it gives that error

    – Usman Zia Malik
    Aug 26 '15 at 14:13











  • See the point no 2 in my previous comment. Kali is based on Debian so it has the same installer. Try to use expert install and skip CDROM step.

    – mnmnc
    Aug 26 '15 at 14:33














43












43








43


19






I successfully made a live USB of the Kali Linux.



When I boot from the USB it gives an option to install. I clicked on that option. At one point it was detecting and mounting CD-ROM drives. As I have no CD-drive or any ROM-drive on my laptop, it gives an error




Can't mount and detect CD-ROM drives.




I tried the "live something" option that takes me directly to Kali Linux and it loads successfully but I can't install it permanently. I want to install it so I won't have to waste my time plugging and unplugging the USB.



How to get past the CD-ROM detection and make the installation finish correctly?










share|improve this question
















I successfully made a live USB of the Kali Linux.



When I boot from the USB it gives an option to install. I clicked on that option. At one point it was detecting and mounting CD-ROM drives. As I have no CD-drive or any ROM-drive on my laptop, it gives an error




Can't mount and detect CD-ROM drives.




I tried the "live something" option that takes me directly to Kali Linux and it loads successfully but I can't install it permanently. I want to install it so I won't have to waste my time plugging and unplugging the USB.



How to get past the CD-ROM detection and make the installation finish correctly?







linux boot usb installation






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 26 '15 at 7:46









Jawa

3,15982435




3,15982435










asked Aug 26 '15 at 7:35









Usman Zia MalikUsman Zia Malik

220146




220146













  • 1. How did you create USB installation? I did it using program unetbootin many times and never had any problems. It works with Kali 2.0 without any problems. 2. Did you try to use expert install option? Usually in expert install mode you can skip certain steps by moving to next one in the menu/installation agenda.

    – mnmnc
    Aug 26 '15 at 9:56











  • i did it with rufus there is no probem in making usb but it gives that error

    – Usman Zia Malik
    Aug 26 '15 at 14:13











  • See the point no 2 in my previous comment. Kali is based on Debian so it has the same installer. Try to use expert install and skip CDROM step.

    – mnmnc
    Aug 26 '15 at 14:33



















  • 1. How did you create USB installation? I did it using program unetbootin many times and never had any problems. It works with Kali 2.0 without any problems. 2. Did you try to use expert install option? Usually in expert install mode you can skip certain steps by moving to next one in the menu/installation agenda.

    – mnmnc
    Aug 26 '15 at 9:56











  • i did it with rufus there is no probem in making usb but it gives that error

    – Usman Zia Malik
    Aug 26 '15 at 14:13











  • See the point no 2 in my previous comment. Kali is based on Debian so it has the same installer. Try to use expert install and skip CDROM step.

    – mnmnc
    Aug 26 '15 at 14:33

















1. How did you create USB installation? I did it using program unetbootin many times and never had any problems. It works with Kali 2.0 without any problems. 2. Did you try to use expert install option? Usually in expert install mode you can skip certain steps by moving to next one in the menu/installation agenda.

– mnmnc
Aug 26 '15 at 9:56





1. How did you create USB installation? I did it using program unetbootin many times and never had any problems. It works with Kali 2.0 without any problems. 2. Did you try to use expert install option? Usually in expert install mode you can skip certain steps by moving to next one in the menu/installation agenda.

– mnmnc
Aug 26 '15 at 9:56













i did it with rufus there is no probem in making usb but it gives that error

– Usman Zia Malik
Aug 26 '15 at 14:13





i did it with rufus there is no probem in making usb but it gives that error

– Usman Zia Malik
Aug 26 '15 at 14:13













See the point no 2 in my previous comment. Kali is based on Debian so it has the same installer. Try to use expert install and skip CDROM step.

– mnmnc
Aug 26 '15 at 14:33





See the point no 2 in my previous comment. Kali is based on Debian so it has the same installer. Try to use expert install and skip CDROM step.

– mnmnc
Aug 26 '15 at 14:33










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















54














You could resolve the error by repeating the steps :



Run the installer.



Open a shell (ALT + F2).



Create the directory cdrom directly on the root of the file system:




mkdir /cdrom




Note : If you got problems making the directory /cdrom, disable the CD-rom player in BIOS or disconnect the cable



Mount the USB as if it is a CD-ROM:




mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom




Where sdb1 is your USB device.



You could carry on installation now



After executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom, cd into the /cdrom directory and do an ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and re-select "detect CDROM"



Source :ubuntu and debian



Another layman solution was :




when the Window shows CDROM couldn't be mounted ,




  1. Unplug your USB from system and re insert it


  2. wait for mount/ detection (usb LED glow)


  3. Hit Continue





You could do what I did. Hit escape, type install, hit enter, skip CD drive.






share|improve this answer


























  • Im a new guy and cant understand that

    – Usman Zia Malik
    Aug 26 '15 at 14:13






  • 5





    Layman solution works

    – AdHominem
    Jul 7 '16 at 19:29






  • 2





    Unplugging the usb and putting it back in worked for me. Thanks!

    – Mastro
    Sep 7 '16 at 3:02






  • 2





    after executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom cd into the /cdrom directory and do a ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and reselect "detect CDROM"

    – Daniel F
    Oct 10 '16 at 20:17








  • 1





    For those where this doesn't work: go to "Execute Shell" if trying to run Kali linux and type in dmesg. You may be getting errors but it's a start to debugging why no one's solution will work. In my case, it may actually be a kernel bug, or I've put the wrong installation on. I'm not sure, as it takes forever to download the distro from their site but hey, it may just be that.

    – Paul Carlton
    Oct 21 '16 at 21:31





















28














If you use Rufus (v 2.x) to burn the ISO to USB drive, make sure the option is "DD Image" in "Create a bootable disk using". Not sure if Unetbootin offers the same option. If image is copied using this method, you don't need to go to terminal and manually mount it.



With Rufus (v 3.x), you can not explicitly choose DD mode. IF the ISO is hybrid or has DD mode, Rufus will prompt you to choose ISO or DD mode AFTER clicking start button.






share|improve this answer


























  • I couldn't find this option in Rufus 3.0. I used version 2.18 which has it. This option worked for me as I couldn't disable the non-existent CDROM through the bios.

    – 11chubby11
    Jun 12 '18 at 4:33













  • @11chubby11, answer updated for Rufus v3. It will depend on the ISO file. Rufus will prompt you accordingly. This is a change from Rufus v2 to v3. Previously it allowed you to explicitly choose DD mode.

    – anonymous coward
    Jun 13 '18 at 18:12






  • 1





    This is a much simpler solution than the accepted answer. Thank you!

    – Mako-Wish
    Oct 23 '18 at 23:12











  • Neither the mounting of the device with the types vfat, iso9660, nor a re-inserting of the USB-Device has worked for me. But your solution for Rufus 3.x did it...!

    – bambam2174
    Dec 29 '18 at 0:21



















4














I tried all the answers here and more google results, but none worked. I eventually figured it out, the issue is the file format is not vfat, but iso9660.



When you get the CDROM not found error follow these steps:



Enter a shell (CTRL+Alt+F2)



Note: Kali told me to press (Alt+F2), but this didn't work



Get a list of devices with blkid:



~ # blkid
/dev/sdc1: UUID="2018-04-12-12-04-16-00" LABEL="Kali Live" TYPE="iso9660" PARTUUID="81c5e086-01"


Note: I have shortened my list to the relevant row. Also you can see the storage type is iso9660, not vfat



Mount the Kali CD with the mount command:



~ # mount -t iso9660 /dev/sdc1 /cdrom


Check the contents of /cdrom are as expected:



~ # ls /cdrom
autorun.inf efi g2ldr.mbr md5sum.txt win32-loader.ini
boot efi.img install pool
debian firmware isolinux setup.exe
dists g2ldr live tools


Switch back to the installer (CTRL+Alt+F5)



Note: Kali told me to press (Alt+F1), but this didn't work. I tried F1 through to F5 until I found the correct combination



From the menu tell it to mount the CDROM, if asked choose /dev/sdc1 and /cdrom. I know we have already mounted the drive, but for some reason this step didn't work previously, but worked fine after following the previous steps.



The install will now continue as normal.






share|improve this answer
























  • This solution works for me, thanks! My environment is Kali 2018.3/Rufus 3/DD Image.

    – Icyblade
    Aug 30 '18 at 13:44



















2














checked the issue myself right now: it's a WAY MORE simple - use "Graphical install". It seems to rise additional hw-related services and it works just fine! Also - if you're using 2 flash drives - plug OFF the drive you're about to install it to, boot it in GUI - and then plug the target drive.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    Don't think that's the solution. I have the CD-ROM issue and I only use the Graphical Install option.

    – Marc
    Mar 31 '18 at 12:30











  • The DD Image option above worked for me.

    – Marc
    Mar 31 '18 at 12:42



















1














I have tried every single answer but none of them worked.
After some more searching online I found an answer that worked for me.



It is fairly simple but just download Win32 Disk Imager.
Click on the folder icon and change the filter to all files or .
Then select your .ISO file, select your device and click on write.



After doing this I inserted my USB (3.0) into a USB 2.0 port on my computer.
When I booted to my USB it worked instantly.






share|improve this answer































    0














    From any flavor of Ubuntu, you need to use the application Startup Disk Creator in order to make the live USB Kali, and successfully install Kali from live USB. Because, some others tools to make bootable USB stick from ISO, results to fail install Kali from live USB, as MultibootUSB.






    share|improve this answer






















      protected by Community Sep 13 '15 at 5:46



      Thank you for your interest in this question.
      Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



      Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes








      6 Answers
      6






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      54














      You could resolve the error by repeating the steps :



      Run the installer.



      Open a shell (ALT + F2).



      Create the directory cdrom directly on the root of the file system:




      mkdir /cdrom




      Note : If you got problems making the directory /cdrom, disable the CD-rom player in BIOS or disconnect the cable



      Mount the USB as if it is a CD-ROM:




      mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom




      Where sdb1 is your USB device.



      You could carry on installation now



      After executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom, cd into the /cdrom directory and do an ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and re-select "detect CDROM"



      Source :ubuntu and debian



      Another layman solution was :




      when the Window shows CDROM couldn't be mounted ,




      1. Unplug your USB from system and re insert it


      2. wait for mount/ detection (usb LED glow)


      3. Hit Continue





      You could do what I did. Hit escape, type install, hit enter, skip CD drive.






      share|improve this answer


























      • Im a new guy and cant understand that

        – Usman Zia Malik
        Aug 26 '15 at 14:13






      • 5





        Layman solution works

        – AdHominem
        Jul 7 '16 at 19:29






      • 2





        Unplugging the usb and putting it back in worked for me. Thanks!

        – Mastro
        Sep 7 '16 at 3:02






      • 2





        after executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom cd into the /cdrom directory and do a ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and reselect "detect CDROM"

        – Daniel F
        Oct 10 '16 at 20:17








      • 1





        For those where this doesn't work: go to "Execute Shell" if trying to run Kali linux and type in dmesg. You may be getting errors but it's a start to debugging why no one's solution will work. In my case, it may actually be a kernel bug, or I've put the wrong installation on. I'm not sure, as it takes forever to download the distro from their site but hey, it may just be that.

        – Paul Carlton
        Oct 21 '16 at 21:31


















      54














      You could resolve the error by repeating the steps :



      Run the installer.



      Open a shell (ALT + F2).



      Create the directory cdrom directly on the root of the file system:




      mkdir /cdrom




      Note : If you got problems making the directory /cdrom, disable the CD-rom player in BIOS or disconnect the cable



      Mount the USB as if it is a CD-ROM:




      mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom




      Where sdb1 is your USB device.



      You could carry on installation now



      After executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom, cd into the /cdrom directory and do an ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and re-select "detect CDROM"



      Source :ubuntu and debian



      Another layman solution was :




      when the Window shows CDROM couldn't be mounted ,




      1. Unplug your USB from system and re insert it


      2. wait for mount/ detection (usb LED glow)


      3. Hit Continue





      You could do what I did. Hit escape, type install, hit enter, skip CD drive.






      share|improve this answer


























      • Im a new guy and cant understand that

        – Usman Zia Malik
        Aug 26 '15 at 14:13






      • 5





        Layman solution works

        – AdHominem
        Jul 7 '16 at 19:29






      • 2





        Unplugging the usb and putting it back in worked for me. Thanks!

        – Mastro
        Sep 7 '16 at 3:02






      • 2





        after executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom cd into the /cdrom directory and do a ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and reselect "detect CDROM"

        – Daniel F
        Oct 10 '16 at 20:17








      • 1





        For those where this doesn't work: go to "Execute Shell" if trying to run Kali linux and type in dmesg. You may be getting errors but it's a start to debugging why no one's solution will work. In my case, it may actually be a kernel bug, or I've put the wrong installation on. I'm not sure, as it takes forever to download the distro from their site but hey, it may just be that.

        – Paul Carlton
        Oct 21 '16 at 21:31
















      54












      54








      54







      You could resolve the error by repeating the steps :



      Run the installer.



      Open a shell (ALT + F2).



      Create the directory cdrom directly on the root of the file system:




      mkdir /cdrom




      Note : If you got problems making the directory /cdrom, disable the CD-rom player in BIOS or disconnect the cable



      Mount the USB as if it is a CD-ROM:




      mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom




      Where sdb1 is your USB device.



      You could carry on installation now



      After executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom, cd into the /cdrom directory and do an ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and re-select "detect CDROM"



      Source :ubuntu and debian



      Another layman solution was :




      when the Window shows CDROM couldn't be mounted ,




      1. Unplug your USB from system and re insert it


      2. wait for mount/ detection (usb LED glow)


      3. Hit Continue





      You could do what I did. Hit escape, type install, hit enter, skip CD drive.






      share|improve this answer















      You could resolve the error by repeating the steps :



      Run the installer.



      Open a shell (ALT + F2).



      Create the directory cdrom directly on the root of the file system:




      mkdir /cdrom




      Note : If you got problems making the directory /cdrom, disable the CD-rom player in BIOS or disconnect the cable



      Mount the USB as if it is a CD-ROM:




      mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom




      Where sdb1 is your USB device.



      You could carry on installation now



      After executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom, cd into the /cdrom directory and do an ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and re-select "detect CDROM"



      Source :ubuntu and debian



      Another layman solution was :




      when the Window shows CDROM couldn't be mounted ,




      1. Unplug your USB from system and re insert it


      2. wait for mount/ detection (usb LED glow)


      3. Hit Continue





      You could do what I did. Hit escape, type install, hit enter, skip CD drive.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited May 25 '18 at 5:40









      Community

      1




      1










      answered Aug 26 '15 at 9:49









      BlueBerry - Vignesh4303BlueBerry - Vignesh4303

      5,518205080




      5,518205080













      • Im a new guy and cant understand that

        – Usman Zia Malik
        Aug 26 '15 at 14:13






      • 5





        Layman solution works

        – AdHominem
        Jul 7 '16 at 19:29






      • 2





        Unplugging the usb and putting it back in worked for me. Thanks!

        – Mastro
        Sep 7 '16 at 3:02






      • 2





        after executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom cd into the /cdrom directory and do a ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and reselect "detect CDROM"

        – Daniel F
        Oct 10 '16 at 20:17








      • 1





        For those where this doesn't work: go to "Execute Shell" if trying to run Kali linux and type in dmesg. You may be getting errors but it's a start to debugging why no one's solution will work. In my case, it may actually be a kernel bug, or I've put the wrong installation on. I'm not sure, as it takes forever to download the distro from their site but hey, it may just be that.

        – Paul Carlton
        Oct 21 '16 at 21:31





















      • Im a new guy and cant understand that

        – Usman Zia Malik
        Aug 26 '15 at 14:13






      • 5





        Layman solution works

        – AdHominem
        Jul 7 '16 at 19:29






      • 2





        Unplugging the usb and putting it back in worked for me. Thanks!

        – Mastro
        Sep 7 '16 at 3:02






      • 2





        after executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom cd into the /cdrom directory and do a ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and reselect "detect CDROM"

        – Daniel F
        Oct 10 '16 at 20:17








      • 1





        For those where this doesn't work: go to "Execute Shell" if trying to run Kali linux and type in dmesg. You may be getting errors but it's a start to debugging why no one's solution will work. In my case, it may actually be a kernel bug, or I've put the wrong installation on. I'm not sure, as it takes forever to download the distro from their site but hey, it may just be that.

        – Paul Carlton
        Oct 21 '16 at 21:31



















      Im a new guy and cant understand that

      – Usman Zia Malik
      Aug 26 '15 at 14:13





      Im a new guy and cant understand that

      – Usman Zia Malik
      Aug 26 '15 at 14:13




      5




      5





      Layman solution works

      – AdHominem
      Jul 7 '16 at 19:29





      Layman solution works

      – AdHominem
      Jul 7 '16 at 19:29




      2




      2





      Unplugging the usb and putting it back in worked for me. Thanks!

      – Mastro
      Sep 7 '16 at 3:02





      Unplugging the usb and putting it back in worked for me. Thanks!

      – Mastro
      Sep 7 '16 at 3:02




      2




      2





      after executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom cd into the /cdrom directory and do a ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and reselect "detect CDROM"

      – Daniel F
      Oct 10 '16 at 20:17







      after executing mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /cdrom cd into the /cdrom directory and do a ls to see if the files are there. Then press ALT-F1 to go back, continue and reselect "detect CDROM"

      – Daniel F
      Oct 10 '16 at 20:17






      1




      1





      For those where this doesn't work: go to "Execute Shell" if trying to run Kali linux and type in dmesg. You may be getting errors but it's a start to debugging why no one's solution will work. In my case, it may actually be a kernel bug, or I've put the wrong installation on. I'm not sure, as it takes forever to download the distro from their site but hey, it may just be that.

      – Paul Carlton
      Oct 21 '16 at 21:31







      For those where this doesn't work: go to "Execute Shell" if trying to run Kali linux and type in dmesg. You may be getting errors but it's a start to debugging why no one's solution will work. In my case, it may actually be a kernel bug, or I've put the wrong installation on. I'm not sure, as it takes forever to download the distro from their site but hey, it may just be that.

      – Paul Carlton
      Oct 21 '16 at 21:31















      28














      If you use Rufus (v 2.x) to burn the ISO to USB drive, make sure the option is "DD Image" in "Create a bootable disk using". Not sure if Unetbootin offers the same option. If image is copied using this method, you don't need to go to terminal and manually mount it.



      With Rufus (v 3.x), you can not explicitly choose DD mode. IF the ISO is hybrid or has DD mode, Rufus will prompt you to choose ISO or DD mode AFTER clicking start button.






      share|improve this answer


























      • I couldn't find this option in Rufus 3.0. I used version 2.18 which has it. This option worked for me as I couldn't disable the non-existent CDROM through the bios.

        – 11chubby11
        Jun 12 '18 at 4:33













      • @11chubby11, answer updated for Rufus v3. It will depend on the ISO file. Rufus will prompt you accordingly. This is a change from Rufus v2 to v3. Previously it allowed you to explicitly choose DD mode.

        – anonymous coward
        Jun 13 '18 at 18:12






      • 1





        This is a much simpler solution than the accepted answer. Thank you!

        – Mako-Wish
        Oct 23 '18 at 23:12











      • Neither the mounting of the device with the types vfat, iso9660, nor a re-inserting of the USB-Device has worked for me. But your solution for Rufus 3.x did it...!

        – bambam2174
        Dec 29 '18 at 0:21
















      28














      If you use Rufus (v 2.x) to burn the ISO to USB drive, make sure the option is "DD Image" in "Create a bootable disk using". Not sure if Unetbootin offers the same option. If image is copied using this method, you don't need to go to terminal and manually mount it.



      With Rufus (v 3.x), you can not explicitly choose DD mode. IF the ISO is hybrid or has DD mode, Rufus will prompt you to choose ISO or DD mode AFTER clicking start button.






      share|improve this answer


























      • I couldn't find this option in Rufus 3.0. I used version 2.18 which has it. This option worked for me as I couldn't disable the non-existent CDROM through the bios.

        – 11chubby11
        Jun 12 '18 at 4:33













      • @11chubby11, answer updated for Rufus v3. It will depend on the ISO file. Rufus will prompt you accordingly. This is a change from Rufus v2 to v3. Previously it allowed you to explicitly choose DD mode.

        – anonymous coward
        Jun 13 '18 at 18:12






      • 1





        This is a much simpler solution than the accepted answer. Thank you!

        – Mako-Wish
        Oct 23 '18 at 23:12











      • Neither the mounting of the device with the types vfat, iso9660, nor a re-inserting of the USB-Device has worked for me. But your solution for Rufus 3.x did it...!

        – bambam2174
        Dec 29 '18 at 0:21














      28












      28








      28







      If you use Rufus (v 2.x) to burn the ISO to USB drive, make sure the option is "DD Image" in "Create a bootable disk using". Not sure if Unetbootin offers the same option. If image is copied using this method, you don't need to go to terminal and manually mount it.



      With Rufus (v 3.x), you can not explicitly choose DD mode. IF the ISO is hybrid or has DD mode, Rufus will prompt you to choose ISO or DD mode AFTER clicking start button.






      share|improve this answer















      If you use Rufus (v 2.x) to burn the ISO to USB drive, make sure the option is "DD Image" in "Create a bootable disk using". Not sure if Unetbootin offers the same option. If image is copied using this method, you don't need to go to terminal and manually mount it.



      With Rufus (v 3.x), you can not explicitly choose DD mode. IF the ISO is hybrid or has DD mode, Rufus will prompt you to choose ISO or DD mode AFTER clicking start button.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Jun 13 '18 at 18:10

























      answered Nov 30 '16 at 0:11









      anonymous cowardanonymous coward

      53056




      53056













      • I couldn't find this option in Rufus 3.0. I used version 2.18 which has it. This option worked for me as I couldn't disable the non-existent CDROM through the bios.

        – 11chubby11
        Jun 12 '18 at 4:33













      • @11chubby11, answer updated for Rufus v3. It will depend on the ISO file. Rufus will prompt you accordingly. This is a change from Rufus v2 to v3. Previously it allowed you to explicitly choose DD mode.

        – anonymous coward
        Jun 13 '18 at 18:12






      • 1





        This is a much simpler solution than the accepted answer. Thank you!

        – Mako-Wish
        Oct 23 '18 at 23:12











      • Neither the mounting of the device with the types vfat, iso9660, nor a re-inserting of the USB-Device has worked for me. But your solution for Rufus 3.x did it...!

        – bambam2174
        Dec 29 '18 at 0:21



















      • I couldn't find this option in Rufus 3.0. I used version 2.18 which has it. This option worked for me as I couldn't disable the non-existent CDROM through the bios.

        – 11chubby11
        Jun 12 '18 at 4:33













      • @11chubby11, answer updated for Rufus v3. It will depend on the ISO file. Rufus will prompt you accordingly. This is a change from Rufus v2 to v3. Previously it allowed you to explicitly choose DD mode.

        – anonymous coward
        Jun 13 '18 at 18:12






      • 1





        This is a much simpler solution than the accepted answer. Thank you!

        – Mako-Wish
        Oct 23 '18 at 23:12











      • Neither the mounting of the device with the types vfat, iso9660, nor a re-inserting of the USB-Device has worked for me. But your solution for Rufus 3.x did it...!

        – bambam2174
        Dec 29 '18 at 0:21

















      I couldn't find this option in Rufus 3.0. I used version 2.18 which has it. This option worked for me as I couldn't disable the non-existent CDROM through the bios.

      – 11chubby11
      Jun 12 '18 at 4:33







      I couldn't find this option in Rufus 3.0. I used version 2.18 which has it. This option worked for me as I couldn't disable the non-existent CDROM through the bios.

      – 11chubby11
      Jun 12 '18 at 4:33















      @11chubby11, answer updated for Rufus v3. It will depend on the ISO file. Rufus will prompt you accordingly. This is a change from Rufus v2 to v3. Previously it allowed you to explicitly choose DD mode.

      – anonymous coward
      Jun 13 '18 at 18:12





      @11chubby11, answer updated for Rufus v3. It will depend on the ISO file. Rufus will prompt you accordingly. This is a change from Rufus v2 to v3. Previously it allowed you to explicitly choose DD mode.

      – anonymous coward
      Jun 13 '18 at 18:12




      1




      1





      This is a much simpler solution than the accepted answer. Thank you!

      – Mako-Wish
      Oct 23 '18 at 23:12





      This is a much simpler solution than the accepted answer. Thank you!

      – Mako-Wish
      Oct 23 '18 at 23:12













      Neither the mounting of the device with the types vfat, iso9660, nor a re-inserting of the USB-Device has worked for me. But your solution for Rufus 3.x did it...!

      – bambam2174
      Dec 29 '18 at 0:21





      Neither the mounting of the device with the types vfat, iso9660, nor a re-inserting of the USB-Device has worked for me. But your solution for Rufus 3.x did it...!

      – bambam2174
      Dec 29 '18 at 0:21











      4














      I tried all the answers here and more google results, but none worked. I eventually figured it out, the issue is the file format is not vfat, but iso9660.



      When you get the CDROM not found error follow these steps:



      Enter a shell (CTRL+Alt+F2)



      Note: Kali told me to press (Alt+F2), but this didn't work



      Get a list of devices with blkid:



      ~ # blkid
      /dev/sdc1: UUID="2018-04-12-12-04-16-00" LABEL="Kali Live" TYPE="iso9660" PARTUUID="81c5e086-01"


      Note: I have shortened my list to the relevant row. Also you can see the storage type is iso9660, not vfat



      Mount the Kali CD with the mount command:



      ~ # mount -t iso9660 /dev/sdc1 /cdrom


      Check the contents of /cdrom are as expected:



      ~ # ls /cdrom
      autorun.inf efi g2ldr.mbr md5sum.txt win32-loader.ini
      boot efi.img install pool
      debian firmware isolinux setup.exe
      dists g2ldr live tools


      Switch back to the installer (CTRL+Alt+F5)



      Note: Kali told me to press (Alt+F1), but this didn't work. I tried F1 through to F5 until I found the correct combination



      From the menu tell it to mount the CDROM, if asked choose /dev/sdc1 and /cdrom. I know we have already mounted the drive, but for some reason this step didn't work previously, but worked fine after following the previous steps.



      The install will now continue as normal.






      share|improve this answer
























      • This solution works for me, thanks! My environment is Kali 2018.3/Rufus 3/DD Image.

        – Icyblade
        Aug 30 '18 at 13:44
















      4














      I tried all the answers here and more google results, but none worked. I eventually figured it out, the issue is the file format is not vfat, but iso9660.



      When you get the CDROM not found error follow these steps:



      Enter a shell (CTRL+Alt+F2)



      Note: Kali told me to press (Alt+F2), but this didn't work



      Get a list of devices with blkid:



      ~ # blkid
      /dev/sdc1: UUID="2018-04-12-12-04-16-00" LABEL="Kali Live" TYPE="iso9660" PARTUUID="81c5e086-01"


      Note: I have shortened my list to the relevant row. Also you can see the storage type is iso9660, not vfat



      Mount the Kali CD with the mount command:



      ~ # mount -t iso9660 /dev/sdc1 /cdrom


      Check the contents of /cdrom are as expected:



      ~ # ls /cdrom
      autorun.inf efi g2ldr.mbr md5sum.txt win32-loader.ini
      boot efi.img install pool
      debian firmware isolinux setup.exe
      dists g2ldr live tools


      Switch back to the installer (CTRL+Alt+F5)



      Note: Kali told me to press (Alt+F1), but this didn't work. I tried F1 through to F5 until I found the correct combination



      From the menu tell it to mount the CDROM, if asked choose /dev/sdc1 and /cdrom. I know we have already mounted the drive, but for some reason this step didn't work previously, but worked fine after following the previous steps.



      The install will now continue as normal.






      share|improve this answer
























      • This solution works for me, thanks! My environment is Kali 2018.3/Rufus 3/DD Image.

        – Icyblade
        Aug 30 '18 at 13:44














      4












      4








      4







      I tried all the answers here and more google results, but none worked. I eventually figured it out, the issue is the file format is not vfat, but iso9660.



      When you get the CDROM not found error follow these steps:



      Enter a shell (CTRL+Alt+F2)



      Note: Kali told me to press (Alt+F2), but this didn't work



      Get a list of devices with blkid:



      ~ # blkid
      /dev/sdc1: UUID="2018-04-12-12-04-16-00" LABEL="Kali Live" TYPE="iso9660" PARTUUID="81c5e086-01"


      Note: I have shortened my list to the relevant row. Also you can see the storage type is iso9660, not vfat



      Mount the Kali CD with the mount command:



      ~ # mount -t iso9660 /dev/sdc1 /cdrom


      Check the contents of /cdrom are as expected:



      ~ # ls /cdrom
      autorun.inf efi g2ldr.mbr md5sum.txt win32-loader.ini
      boot efi.img install pool
      debian firmware isolinux setup.exe
      dists g2ldr live tools


      Switch back to the installer (CTRL+Alt+F5)



      Note: Kali told me to press (Alt+F1), but this didn't work. I tried F1 through to F5 until I found the correct combination



      From the menu tell it to mount the CDROM, if asked choose /dev/sdc1 and /cdrom. I know we have already mounted the drive, but for some reason this step didn't work previously, but worked fine after following the previous steps.



      The install will now continue as normal.






      share|improve this answer













      I tried all the answers here and more google results, but none worked. I eventually figured it out, the issue is the file format is not vfat, but iso9660.



      When you get the CDROM not found error follow these steps:



      Enter a shell (CTRL+Alt+F2)



      Note: Kali told me to press (Alt+F2), but this didn't work



      Get a list of devices with blkid:



      ~ # blkid
      /dev/sdc1: UUID="2018-04-12-12-04-16-00" LABEL="Kali Live" TYPE="iso9660" PARTUUID="81c5e086-01"


      Note: I have shortened my list to the relevant row. Also you can see the storage type is iso9660, not vfat



      Mount the Kali CD with the mount command:



      ~ # mount -t iso9660 /dev/sdc1 /cdrom


      Check the contents of /cdrom are as expected:



      ~ # ls /cdrom
      autorun.inf efi g2ldr.mbr md5sum.txt win32-loader.ini
      boot efi.img install pool
      debian firmware isolinux setup.exe
      dists g2ldr live tools


      Switch back to the installer (CTRL+Alt+F5)



      Note: Kali told me to press (Alt+F1), but this didn't work. I tried F1 through to F5 until I found the correct combination



      From the menu tell it to mount the CDROM, if asked choose /dev/sdc1 and /cdrom. I know we have already mounted the drive, but for some reason this step didn't work previously, but worked fine after following the previous steps.



      The install will now continue as normal.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Aug 10 '18 at 9:48









      pholcroftpholcroft

      26115




      26115













      • This solution works for me, thanks! My environment is Kali 2018.3/Rufus 3/DD Image.

        – Icyblade
        Aug 30 '18 at 13:44



















      • This solution works for me, thanks! My environment is Kali 2018.3/Rufus 3/DD Image.

        – Icyblade
        Aug 30 '18 at 13:44

















      This solution works for me, thanks! My environment is Kali 2018.3/Rufus 3/DD Image.

      – Icyblade
      Aug 30 '18 at 13:44





      This solution works for me, thanks! My environment is Kali 2018.3/Rufus 3/DD Image.

      – Icyblade
      Aug 30 '18 at 13:44











      2














      checked the issue myself right now: it's a WAY MORE simple - use "Graphical install". It seems to rise additional hw-related services and it works just fine! Also - if you're using 2 flash drives - plug OFF the drive you're about to install it to, boot it in GUI - and then plug the target drive.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        Don't think that's the solution. I have the CD-ROM issue and I only use the Graphical Install option.

        – Marc
        Mar 31 '18 at 12:30











      • The DD Image option above worked for me.

        – Marc
        Mar 31 '18 at 12:42
















      2














      checked the issue myself right now: it's a WAY MORE simple - use "Graphical install". It seems to rise additional hw-related services and it works just fine! Also - if you're using 2 flash drives - plug OFF the drive you're about to install it to, boot it in GUI - and then plug the target drive.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        Don't think that's the solution. I have the CD-ROM issue and I only use the Graphical Install option.

        – Marc
        Mar 31 '18 at 12:30











      • The DD Image option above worked for me.

        – Marc
        Mar 31 '18 at 12:42














      2












      2








      2







      checked the issue myself right now: it's a WAY MORE simple - use "Graphical install". It seems to rise additional hw-related services and it works just fine! Also - if you're using 2 flash drives - plug OFF the drive you're about to install it to, boot it in GUI - and then plug the target drive.






      share|improve this answer













      checked the issue myself right now: it's a WAY MORE simple - use "Graphical install". It seems to rise additional hw-related services and it works just fine! Also - if you're using 2 flash drives - plug OFF the drive you're about to install it to, boot it in GUI - and then plug the target drive.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Nov 13 '16 at 21:14









      Alexey VesninAlexey Vesnin

      56559




      56559








      • 1





        Don't think that's the solution. I have the CD-ROM issue and I only use the Graphical Install option.

        – Marc
        Mar 31 '18 at 12:30











      • The DD Image option above worked for me.

        – Marc
        Mar 31 '18 at 12:42














      • 1





        Don't think that's the solution. I have the CD-ROM issue and I only use the Graphical Install option.

        – Marc
        Mar 31 '18 at 12:30











      • The DD Image option above worked for me.

        – Marc
        Mar 31 '18 at 12:42








      1




      1





      Don't think that's the solution. I have the CD-ROM issue and I only use the Graphical Install option.

      – Marc
      Mar 31 '18 at 12:30





      Don't think that's the solution. I have the CD-ROM issue and I only use the Graphical Install option.

      – Marc
      Mar 31 '18 at 12:30













      The DD Image option above worked for me.

      – Marc
      Mar 31 '18 at 12:42





      The DD Image option above worked for me.

      – Marc
      Mar 31 '18 at 12:42











      1














      I have tried every single answer but none of them worked.
      After some more searching online I found an answer that worked for me.



      It is fairly simple but just download Win32 Disk Imager.
      Click on the folder icon and change the filter to all files or .
      Then select your .ISO file, select your device and click on write.



      After doing this I inserted my USB (3.0) into a USB 2.0 port on my computer.
      When I booted to my USB it worked instantly.






      share|improve this answer




























        1














        I have tried every single answer but none of them worked.
        After some more searching online I found an answer that worked for me.



        It is fairly simple but just download Win32 Disk Imager.
        Click on the folder icon and change the filter to all files or .
        Then select your .ISO file, select your device and click on write.



        After doing this I inserted my USB (3.0) into a USB 2.0 port on my computer.
        When I booted to my USB it worked instantly.






        share|improve this answer


























          1












          1








          1







          I have tried every single answer but none of them worked.
          After some more searching online I found an answer that worked for me.



          It is fairly simple but just download Win32 Disk Imager.
          Click on the folder icon and change the filter to all files or .
          Then select your .ISO file, select your device and click on write.



          After doing this I inserted my USB (3.0) into a USB 2.0 port on my computer.
          When I booted to my USB it worked instantly.






          share|improve this answer













          I have tried every single answer but none of them worked.
          After some more searching online I found an answer that worked for me.



          It is fairly simple but just download Win32 Disk Imager.
          Click on the folder icon and change the filter to all files or .
          Then select your .ISO file, select your device and click on write.



          After doing this I inserted my USB (3.0) into a USB 2.0 port on my computer.
          When I booted to my USB it worked instantly.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 29 '18 at 22:28









          RamonRobbenRamonRobben

          850515




          850515























              0














              From any flavor of Ubuntu, you need to use the application Startup Disk Creator in order to make the live USB Kali, and successfully install Kali from live USB. Because, some others tools to make bootable USB stick from ISO, results to fail install Kali from live USB, as MultibootUSB.






              share|improve this answer




























                0














                From any flavor of Ubuntu, you need to use the application Startup Disk Creator in order to make the live USB Kali, and successfully install Kali from live USB. Because, some others tools to make bootable USB stick from ISO, results to fail install Kali from live USB, as MultibootUSB.






                share|improve this answer


























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  From any flavor of Ubuntu, you need to use the application Startup Disk Creator in order to make the live USB Kali, and successfully install Kali from live USB. Because, some others tools to make bootable USB stick from ISO, results to fail install Kali from live USB, as MultibootUSB.






                  share|improve this answer













                  From any flavor of Ubuntu, you need to use the application Startup Disk Creator in order to make the live USB Kali, and successfully install Kali from live USB. Because, some others tools to make bootable USB stick from ISO, results to fail install Kali from live USB, as MultibootUSB.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 6 hours ago









                  NicolasSmithNicolasSmith

                  1294




                  1294

















                      protected by Community Sep 13 '15 at 5:46



                      Thank you for your interest in this question.
                      Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



                      Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



                      Popular posts from this blog

                      Cannot install PyQt5 The Next CEO of Stack OverflowCannot install tcpreplay 3.4.4cannot...

                      Kapp-Putsch Acontecimentos | Outros artigos | Menu de navegação

                      Why did early computer designers eschew integers? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowWhat register...