FreedomBox milestone - all packages now in Debian Sid

The Freedombox project is working on providing the software and hardware to make it easy for non-technical people to host their data and communication at home, and being able to communicate with their friends and family encrypted and away from prying eyes. It is still going strong, and today a major mile stone was reached.

Today, the last of the packages currently used by the project to created the system images were accepted into Debian Unstable. It was the freedombox-setup package, which is used to configure the images during build and on the first boot. Now all one need to get going is the build code from the freedom-maker git repository and packages from Debian. And once the freedombox-setup package enter testing, we can build everything directly from Debian. :)

Some key packages used by Freedombox are freedombox-setup, plinth, pagekite, tor, privoxy, owncloud and dnsmasq. There are plans to integrate more packages into the setup. User documentation is maintained on the Debian wiki. Please check out the manual and help us improve it.

To test for yourself and create boot images with the FreedomBox setup, run this on a Debian machine using a user with sudo rights to become root:

sudo apt-get install git vmdebootstrap mercurial python-docutils \ mktorrent extlinux virtualbox qemu-user-static binfmt-support \ u-boot-tools git clone http://anonscm.debian.org/git/freedombox/freedom-maker.git \ freedom-maker make -C freedom-maker dreamplug-image raspberry-image virtualbox-image

Root access is needed to run debootstrap and mount loopback devices. See the README in the freedom-maker git repo for more details on the build. If you do not want all three images, trim the make line. Note that the virtualbox-image target is not really virtualbox specific. It create a x86 image usable in kvm, qemu, vmware and any other x86 virtual machine environment. You might need the version of vmdebootstrap in Jessie to get the build working, as it include fixes for a race condition with kpartx.

If you instead want to install using a Debian CD and the preseed method, boot a Debian Wheezy ISO and use this boot argument to load the preseed values:

I have not tested it myself the last few weeks, so I do not know if it still work.

If you wonder how to help, one task you could look at is using systemd as the boot system. It will become the default for Linux in Jessie, so we need to make sure it is usable on the Freedombox. I did a simple test a few weeks ago, and noticed dnsmasq failed to start during boot when using systemd. I suspect there are other problems too. :) To detect problems, there is a test suite included, which can be run from the plinth web interface.

Give it a go and let us know how it goes on the mailing list, and help us get the new release published. :) Please join us on IRC (#freedombox on irc.debian.org) and the mailing list if you want to help make this vision come true.