heads/README.md

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![Heads boot ROM motd](https://farm9.staticflickr.com/8638/28577284936_c91100d1f7_z_d.jpg)
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Heads: the other side of TAILS
===
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Heads is a configuration for laptops and servers that tries to bring
more security to commodity hardware. Among its goals are:
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* Use free software on the boot path
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* Move the root of trust into hardware (or at least the ROM bootblock)
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* Measure and attest to the state of the firmware
* Measure and verify all filesystems
![Flashing Heads into the boot ROM](https://farm1.staticflickr.com/553/30969183324_c31d8f2dee_z_d.jpg)
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NOTE: It is a work in progress and not yet ready for non-technical users.
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If you're interested in contributing, please get in touch.
Installation requires disassembly of your laptop or server,
external SPI flash programmers, possible risk of destruction and
significant frustration.
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More information is available in [the 33C3 presentation of building "Slightly more secure systems"](https://trmm.net/Heads_33c3).
Documentation
===
Please refer to [Heads-wiki](https://github.com/osresearch/heads-wiki/blob/master/index.md) for your Heads' documentation needs.
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Building heads
===
In order to build reproducible firmware images, Heads builds a specific
version of gcc and uses it to compile the Linux kernel and various tools
that go into the initrd. Unfortunately this means the first step is a
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little slow since it will clone the `musl-cross` tree and build gcc...
Once that is done, the top level `Makefile` will handle most of the
remaining details -- it downloads the various packages, verifies the
hashes, applies Heads specific patches, configures and builds them
with the cross compiler, and then copies the necessary parts into
the `initrd` directory.
There are still dependencies on the build system's coreutils in
`/bin` and `/usr/bin/`, but any problems should be detectable if you
end up with a different hash than the official builds.
The various components that are downloaded are in the `./modules`
directory and include:
* [musl-libc](https://www.musl-libc.org/)
* [busybox](https://busybox.net/)
* [kexec](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/kexec)
* [mbedtls](https://tls.mbed.org/)
* [tpmtotp](https://trmm.net/Tpmtotp)
* [coreboot](https://www.coreboot.org/)
* [cryptsetup](https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup)
* [lvm2](https://sourceware.org/lvm2/)
* [gnupg](https://www.gnupg.org/)
* [Linux kernel](https://kernel.org)
* [Xen hypervisor](https://www.xenproject.org/)
We also recommend installing [Qubes OS](https://www.qubes-os.org/),
although there Heads can `kexec` into any Linux or
[multiboot](https://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/multiboot/multiboot.html)
kernel.
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Notes:
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---
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* Building coreboot's cross compilers can take a while. Luckily this is only done once.
* Builds are finally reproducible! The [reproduciblebuilds tag](https://github.com/osresearch/heads/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+milestone%3Areproduciblebuilds) tracks any regressions.
* Currently only tested in QEMU, the Thinkpad x230 and the Chell Chromebook.
** Xen and the TPM do not work in QEMU, so it is only for testing the `initrd` image.
* Building for the Lenovo X220 requires binary blobs to be placed in the blobs/x220/ folder.
See the readme.md file in that folder
* Building for the Librem 13 v2/v3 or Librem 15 v3/v4 requires binary blobs to be placed in
the blobs/librem_skl folder. See the readme.md file in that folder
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coreboot console messages
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---
The coreboot console messages are stored in the CBMEM region
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and can be read by the Linux payload with the `cbmem --console | less`
command. There is lots of interesting data about the state of the
system.