freedombonee/doc/EN/debianinstall.org

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#+TITLE:
#+AUTHOR: Bob Mottram
#+EMAIL: bob@freedombone.net
#+KEYWORDS: freedombone, debian, install
#+DESCRIPTION: How to install Freedombone onto an existing Debian system
#+OPTIONS: ^:nil toc:nil
#+HTML_HEAD: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="freedombone.css" />
#+BEGIN_CENTER
[[file:images/logo.png]]
#+END_CENTER
#+BEGIN_EXPORT html
<center>
<h1>How to install on an existing Debian system</h1>
</center>
#+END_EXPORT
2018-02-17 22:20:06 +01:00
#+BEGIN_QUOTE
"/The antagonism of surveillance is not privacy but the making of communities in struggle/"
-- Arun Kundnani
#+END_QUOTE
Although the image builder supports a variety of architectures there may still be some which aren't supported. These especially include systems which have a proprietary boot blob, such as the Raspberry Pi boards.
2017-06-26 00:24:17 +02:00
It's still possible to install the system onto these unsupported devices if you need to. First you'll need to ensure that you have *Debian Stretch* installed and can get ssh access to the system. Then either via ssh, or directly on the target device in the case of an old laptop or netbook:
#+BEGIN_SRC bash
su
apt-get update
apt-get -qy install build-essential git dialog
git clone https://github.com/bashrc/freedombone
cd freedombone
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git checkout stretch
make install
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freedombone menuconfig (or freedombone menuconfig-onion)
#+END_SRC
The installation process will then begin. Depending upon the hardware you're installing onto and your internet connection speed it may take quite a while to install.
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Once installed you can then log in from another system with:
#+BEGIN_SRC bash
ssh yourusername@freedombone.local -p 2222
#+END_SRC