openhaystack
OSX-KVM
openhaystack | OSX-KVM | |
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68 | 263 | |
7,887 | 18,469 | |
2.3% | - | |
2.7 | 5.6 | |
about 2 months ago | 22 days ago | |
Swift | Python | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | - |
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openhaystack
- Beeper Mini will add SMS & RCS, other services, and FaceTime in ‘near future’
- OpenHaystack is a framework for tracking personal Bluetooth devices via Apple's massive Find My network. Use it to create your own tracking tags that you can append to physical objects (keyrings, backpacks, etc)
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Apple: Android is a tracking device [pdf]
> For Find My, since they can even locate switched off phones
They can't. Find My is actually truly end-to-end encrypted, at least the version used for when a device is off (I'm not 100% sure how encrypted the self-reported version is for powered on iPhones with data).
Copy-pasting my summary about how Find My works from another comment in this post:
> The master private key used by the system is generated locally and never leaves your Apple devices in a state that anyone except your devices can read it.
> The master key is used to derive an AirTag specific private key which is provisioned to the AirTag and is in turn combined with an increasing counter which generates a third private key that's never stored anywhere. The ID broadcast is the public key of this third key. It changes every 30 minutes or 1 hour, I forget which.
> Other devices see this key, use it to encrypt their own location, and upload that encrypted blob along with the public key to Find My, and in order for Apple to even know which account the encrypted blob they can't decrypt belongs to I have to actually request the location of my AirTag by locally deriving the keypair it used for a certain point in time.
This has all been proven through [1] where they read the whitepaper (which I can't for the life of me find now but know exist because I've read it, or at least parts) and implemented OpenHaystack which proves Apple aren't lying about anything because if they did then OpenHaystack wouldn't work.
1: https://github.com/seemoo-lab/openhaystack
- Find my cat: open-source Cat Tracker
- Where can I put a AirTag on my Flipper zero
- [Question] Is it possible to spoof an airtag location with an android device or some kind of Arduino configuration?
- My graduation thesis: Person Following Robot - Smart Trolley 🛒🛒🛒, which runs in real-time on Jetson Nano and can work in all complex types of floors with 3D Vision
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J'ai trouver des Airpod dans sur la ligne L, est t-il possible de retrouver son propriétaire?
find my network
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Kuba Wojciechowski: Google is working on a smart tracker similar to Apple's AirTag, codename "grogu"
Much more nuance than that. You can't just tap into the networks. More information here https://github.com/seemoo-lab/openhaystack
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AirTags replacement
You can actually create your own, using Apple's "find my" network. See OpenHaystack
OSX-KVM
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VirtualBox KVM Public Release
Yes, I recently had to compile some stuff on Windows (I'm on an AMD Linux host) and VirtualBox just wouldn't start Microsoft's Windows dev VM (the one they provide for free for Virtualbox). I ended up learning how to use qemu and it works great...and as a bonus I was able to run a hackintosh (via https://github.com/kholia/OSX-KVM) and it works near flawlessly, which was something I was never able to accomplish with Virtualbox (granted I haven't tried in a few years).
I'm pretty happy with Qemu now, even if it's jsut a CLI interface. I was tempted to try the virt-* stuff, but honestly it seems like one more thing to learn so I'm going to hold off until I need something like copy/paste between VMs and can't figure it out in qemu direct.
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NixThePlanet - Run macOS, Windows and more via a single Nix command + nixosModules
Working on a patch to include it as a flake input instead of vendoring it in the repo, so this should no longer be true. I use the QCOW2s for OpenCore from osx-kvm that I have not figured out how to reproduce yet https://github.com/kholia/OSX-KVM/blob/master/OpenCore/OpenCore.qcow2
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[PROJECT] Working on a project called ultimate-macOS-KVM!
For almost a year, I have been coding a little project in Python intended to piggyback on the framework of kholia's OSX-KVM project, known as ultimate-macOS-KVM, or ULTMOS.
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FreeBSD Bhyve Virtualization
I just researched a bit, mac os x guest vm with pcie passthrough seems possible on linux.
Dropping the links below:
https://github.com/kholia/OSX-KVM
https://github.com/yoonsikp/macOS-KVM-PCI-Passthrough
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VirGL
VirGL is definitely an interesting project, but all one has to do to get GPU passthrough working (from a Linux QEMU host to any guest OS) is: 1.) research a cheap, secondary GPU that is natively supported by the guest OS, 2.) plug such a secondary GPU into a PCIe slot on the host and hook it up to the primary monitor with a secondary cable (D-Sub vs. DVI, etc.), 3.) setup Linux to ignore the secondary GPU at boot and configure a QEMU VM for the GPU passthrough. The whole process takes perhaps one or two hours and as works flawlessly, with no stability issues. (Switching across the two GPU cables can be accomplished in software by using Display Data Channel /DDC/ utilities and switching keyboard/mouse can be accomplished by using evdev /event device/ passthrough.) More information: https://github.com/kholia/OSX-KVM/blob/master/notes.md#gpu-p...
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Mac OS Kvm Icloud
I get "verification failed" error when using https://github.com/kholia/OSX-KVM
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What are the current best methods for virtualizing MacOS on Linux?
I also see there is KVM-OSX which looks to be actively maintained, but I haven't heard anything about it.
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Lima: A nice way to run Linux VMs on Mac
You can use qemu/libvirt/kvm on any Linux host to run macOS pretty easily these days[1]. I run Ventura on unraid with nvidea gpu passthrough and it’s been fairly painless.
You can also run macOS in docker, but it’s ultimately running through qemu/kvm as well[2]
1. https://github.com/kholia/OSX-KVM
2. https://github.com/sickcodes/Docker-OSX
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Gnome browser instead of Safari
I think this could be of some use to you https://github.com/kholia/OSX-KVM
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I achieved to run a macOS VM on the Steam Deck in SteamOS desktop mode
i cloned that repository
What are some alternatives?
opendrop - An open Apple AirDrop implementation written in Python
macOS-Simple-KVM - Tools to set up a quick macOS VM in QEMU, accelerated by KVM.
AirGuard - Protect yourself from being tracked 🌍 by AirTags 🏷 and Find My accessories 📍
sosumi-snap
bluesnooze - Sleeping Mac = Bluetooth off
OpenCore-Install-Guide - Repo for the OpenCore Install Guide
ubertooth - Software, firmware, and hardware designs for Ubertooth
macOS-KVM - Streamlined macOS QEMU KVM Hackintosh configuration using OpenCore and libvirt
Brooklyn - 🍎 Screensaver inspired by Apple's Event on October 30, 2018
OSX_GVT-D - Guide to pass iGPU to MacOS KVM guest.
send-my - Upload arbitrary data via Apple's Find My network.
Single-GPU-Passthrough