dracut-sshd
distrobox
dracut-sshd | distrobox | |
---|---|---|
7 | 402 | |
204 | 8,976 | |
- | - | |
4.6 | 9.6 | |
about 1 month ago | 4 days ago | |
Shell | Shell | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
dracut-sshd
- Tinyssh
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home server encryption
There is also dracut-sshd, which works great for distros using - surprise - dracut.
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Encryption with NAS Volume
Personally, I'm running OpenSuse Tumbleweed and used the graphical installer this time out of convenience. If you want to remotely unlock it over ssh, I can recommend https://github.com/gsauthof/dracut-sshd. Works pretty well.
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I switched to MicroOS GNOME and I don't think I'm returning back to regular distributions
The only thing that prevented me from going with MicroOS during my last server install was uncertainty about how well it would handle remote unlocking of luks system encryption for which I'm using dracut-sshd.
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Getting WiFi to Connect Early (for dracut-sshd).
I'm trying to use the dracut-sshd package on Fedora 35. The instructions only describe how to use dracut-network and networkd to get a wired internet connection during boot (for SSH to work). I'm completely unfamiliar with these so I'm not sure what to change in order to make it work with a wireless connection instead. I tried changing their example in various ways with no luck.
- Remotely unlocking headless server
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Remote unlocking encrypted system via ssh doesn't work!
I prefer this https://github.com/gsauthof/dracut-sshd
distrobox
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Windows 11 now comes with its own adware
Regarding the stability issue on a dev machine - you may be interested in playing with one of the immutable-os distros, such as SilverBlue (fedora based).
The high-level take-away is you can't break your actual OS since it's root filesystem is read-only, and you use "pet" containers (on docker, podman, whatever) to do your work in. Applications are either sandboxed via Flatpak, or installed/run inside your pet containers. If your pet container dies, you cry about it for a moment, and when you're ready you get a new one - your actual os and other containers remain unaffected.
I use distrobox[1] to create/run the pet containers.
[1] https://github.com/89luca89/distrobox
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Tools for Linux Distro Hoppers
Distrobox is a tool that enables us to try Linux distro CLI, including their package manager. This requires a containerization tool (e.g., Docker). In Windows, this can be achieved using WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux)
- Distrobox: Use any Linux distribution inside your terminal
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Fedora Atomic Desktops
I use containerized versions of things, ubuntu and chainguard images mostly.
You can always create containers with init if that's how you want to do that though. Some distros publish images that come that way: https://github.com/89luca89/distrobox/blob/main/docs/useful_...
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Raspberry Pi is manufacturing 70K Raspberry Pi 5s per week
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38505448 ... https://github.com/89luca89/distrobox/blob/main/docs/useful_...
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Operating System?
Yes, you can do that but I've seen others use something like distrobox to run linux inside of SteamOS: https://github.com/89luca89/distrobox/blob/main/docs/posts/steamdeck_guide.md
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How much will I screw up my system after installing Merkuro Calendar (KDE Akonadi application), formerly called Kalendar, on GNOME?
For such cases you might use something like this: https://github.com/89luca89/distrobox
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Battery consumption of using remote development with WSL2?
Btw #3: Depending on what the user is trying to accomplish, e.g. maybe to make WSL(2) itself more of a "subsystem" than a "container engine", using something like Distrobox or nsbox.dev can be a good idea (along with Docker or Podman in Distrobox's case; the other one uses systemd-nspawn).
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Cannot run containers with Distrobox
1. Find here in "Containers Distros" section the distro image that you want to install ("Toolbox" versions are better because they are configured for Distrobox) and get it URL: https://distrobox.it/compatibility/#containers-distros 2. Use that URL to create Distrobox: distrobox create -i registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora-toolbox:39 -n fedora_1_39 3. Enter Distrobox fedora_1_39: distrobox enter fedora_1_39 4. You are already in Distrobox console. Look at the name in console, it should be include the container name. 5. To exit Distrobox: exit 6. If you run: distrobox list you will see all distroboxes on the system. You will also see that distrobox that we exited is still running. 7. To stop distrobox use commands: distrobox stop fedora_1_39
- In-depth Distrobox tutorial/ or video?
What are some alternatives?
wireguard-initramfs - Use dropbear over wireguard.
toolbox - Tool for interactive command line environments on Linux
dracut-crypt-ssh - dracut initramfs module to start dropbear sshd during boot to unlock the root filesystem with the (cryptsetup) LUKS passphrase remotely
wsl-distrod - Distrod is a meta-distro for WSL 2 which installs Ubuntu, Arch, Debian, Gentoo, etc. with systemd in a minute for you. Distrod also has built-in auto-start feature on Windows startup and port forwarding ability.
dracut - dracut the event driven initramfs infrastructure
docker-android - Android in docker solution with noVNC supported and video recording
u-root - A fully Go userland with Linux bootloaders! u-root can create a one-binary root file system (initramfs) containing a busybox-like set of tools written in Go.
flatpak - Linux application sandboxing and distribution framework
ubuntu-server-zfsbootmenu - Ubuntu zfsbootmenu install script
rustdesk - An open-source remote desktop, and alternative to TeamViewer.
yubikey-full-disk-encryption - Use YubiKey to unlock a LUKS partition
toolbox-vscode - Toolbox Visual Studio Code integration