freedombonee/doc/EN/debianinstall.org

42 lines
1.6 KiB
Org Mode

#+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" />
#+attr_html: :width 80% :height 10% :align center
[[file:images/logo.png]]
* How to install on an existing Debian system
#+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.
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
git checkout stretch
make install
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.
Once installed you can then log in from another system with:
#+BEGIN_SRC bash
ssh yourusername@freedombone.local -p 2222
#+END_SRC