![]() All this will probably be done automatically for you if you write the Kali image into the whole-disk device. ![]() The ESP filesystem type must be FAT32 (or specifically on Macs, HFS will also work): ExFAT will not work unless Apple has added specific UEFI boot support for it. Note that if you want Kali to be bootable on a modern Mac that uses UEFI, one partition for Kali is not going to be enough: you will also need a small ESP (EFI System Partition) that will contain Kali's bootloader. Once you've done that, you should be able to use partition management tools to make the unused space available as an ExFAT partition. Dd'ing the Kali ISO image to a partition may not work, because if the ISO image has been prepared for use on non-CD drives also, it already contains a partition table: you'll need to dd it into the whole-disk device ( /dev/sddisk2).
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