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mirror of https://github.com/tommytran732/QubesOS-Scripts synced 2024-11-09 04:11:32 -05:00
My Scripts for template VMs
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Tommy 3974e569df
Do not overwrite /etc/environment
Signed-off-by: Tommy <contact@tommytran.io>
2024-04-26 16:21:13 -07:00
fedora Remove old split ssh hack 2024-04-26 16:01:35 -07:00
fedora-minimal Styling fix 2024-04-26 16:12:38 -07:00
kicksecure Remove /etc/hosts hardcode 2024-04-26 15:58:59 -07:00
whonix Remove hardened_malloc from Whonix 2024-04-26 15:53:42 -07:00
.gitignore Create .gitignore 2023-01-16 00:39:37 -05:00
dom0.sh Do not overwrite /etc/environment 2024-04-26 16:21:13 -07:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2022-02-03 02:57:15 -05:00
README.md Fix 2022-05-28 07:24:27 -04:00

QubesOS-Scripts

My scripts for setting up QubesOS.

Running these scripts should be very straight forward. For the default Fedora template, run fedora.sh to trim it down first. For the Debian template, run kicksecure.sh to trim them down and convert them to KickSecure.

After you are done running those scripts, any other script can be used in a different template based on those trimmed down templates to create their respective virtual machines.

I have a script to create a Brave VM based on the normal Fedora template. The idea behind this is that you would want to use a disposable Brave VM for web browsing most of the time, and have it seperated from your AppVM. If you try to visit a link inside of an AppVM without a browser, qubes will launch a browser inside of a disposable VM for you. Of course, for VMs where you want the browser to stay persistent, you can just base it on the Brave template instead.

If you want to install Flatpak packages, install them inside of an AppVM as a user Flatpak and enable the update-user-flatpaks.service as a user systemd service for automatic updates.

It is recommended that you follow the docs here to make a prompt for root access on non-minimal VMs. dom0.sh already takes care dom dom0 so you only need to worry about the guests.