AREDN: Difference between revisions

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Brian Wilson (talk | contribs)
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<code>sudo apt install qemu-system-x86 qemu-system-arm qemu-system-common</code>
<code>sudo apt install qemu-system-x86 qemu-system-arm qemu-system-common</code>


Here on Bellman I will be [https://www.baeldung.com/linux/qemu-from-terminal doing everything from command line.] I am fed up with the mysteries of the AREDN package so I am first going to load a Debian image [https://laotzu.ftp.acc.umu.se/images/cloud/bookworm/latest/debian-12-nocloud-amd64.raw (qemu RAW format)] (or a [https://cloud.debian.org/images/cloud/bookworm/latest/debian-12-nocloud-amd64.qcow2 qemu QCOW2 format]). Then openwrt. Finally, AREDN.
Here on Bellman I will be doing everything from the command line. I am fed up with the mysteries of the AREDN package so I am first going to load a Debian image [https://laotzu.ftp.acc.umu.se/images/cloud/bookworm/latest/debian-12-nocloud-amd64.raw (qemu RAW format)] (or a [https://cloud.debian.org/images/cloud/bookworm/latest/debian-12-nocloud-amd64.qcow2 qemu QCOW2 format]). Then openwrt. Finally, AREDN.
 
qemu-system-x86_64 --enable-kvm -m 1G -smp 2 -hda debian-12-nocloud-amd64.qcow2 -nographic \
-netdev user,id=debnet -device e1000,netdev=debnet
 
Screenless options are explored here: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6710555/how-to-use-qemu-to-run-a-non-gui-os-on-the-terminal The option"-nographic" works fine for me, I can see console output in my shell terminal window and just type away just like being there.
 
Log in as "root" (no password). There you go. When done, type "poweroff". Only but now you need networking which is the whole point, really. By default I can see "ip a" looks like there is a 10.x.x.x net on ens3. It works out of the box with NAT, I can do this from the guest
 
<pre>
apt update
apt install ssh-client
(base) bwilson@bellman:~$ who
bwilson  pts/0        2024-12-12 20:10 (192.168.123.99)
bwilson  pts/2        2024-12-12 20:25 (192.168.123.99)
bwilson  pts/3        2024-12-12 20:47 (192.168.123.2) <---------------- ta da
</pre>
 
Learn more about networking: https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/QEMU/Networking and here https://wiki.qemu.org/Features/HelperNetworking
 
Set up a TAP interface
 
sudo chmod u+s /usr/lib/qemu/qemu-bridge-helper
 
sudo mkdir /etc/qemu
 
echo "allow br0" | sudo tee /etc/qemu/bridge.conf


== Build your own ==
== Build your own ==

Revision as of 05:01, 13 December 2024

"Amateur Radio Emergency Digital Network" or some such. They pronounce this "ARRR DIN" like a pirate. I want to call it "ARR-AH-DIN". Too bad for me.

Main page is at https://arednmesh.org/

The nearest neighbor for me is the Willamette Valley Mesh Network.

Building an Internet-only node

on a ProxMox Virtual Machine

I installed on Tern this because my travails on VirtualBox left me wondering what a supported install looked like.It was a hard fail because Proxmox would not work on this machine.

on a VirtualBox Virtual Machine

Officially they support ProxMox (don't have one), VMWare ($) and QEMU. Setting up to run in VirtualBox was easy enough, now I just have to sort the networking out.

2024-12-07

VBoxManage convertfromraw --format VDI aredn-3.24.10.0-x86-64-generic-ext4-combined.img aredn-3.24.10.0-x86-64-generic-ext4-combined.vdi
Converting from raw image file="aredn-3.24.10.0-x86-64-generic-ext4-combined.img" to file="aredn-3.24.10.0-x86-64-generic-ext4-combined.vdi"...
Creating dynamic image with size 126353408 bytes (121MB)...
  • Create in a vbox machine (128MB RAM, 2 CPUs), remove the IDE controller, and add a second network adapter and set it to Bridged mode
  • Launch the machine.
  • It shows a hostname of NOCALL, it is possible to set a hostname using "W6GKD-astoria", like this, but this is the wrong thing. Instead run "/usr/local/bin/firstuse-setup W6GKD-astoria" and that will set the hostname and do other as-yet unspecified stuff. I chose the name based on their rules which say make the callsign all caps.
uci set system.@system[0].hostname='W6GKD-astoria'
uci commit system
/etc/init.d/system reload
  • Reboot. This gets me some IP addresses in /etc/hosts. Funky ones.
  • In the console, entered commands to set br-lan to DHCP and rebooted. That got me a usable IP address on my lan.
  • Connected with password "hsmm" using ssh -p 2222 [email protected]
  • Rebooted. Now there are services on port 80 and 8080 but not reachable (?).

Sorting out the networking

Documentation on the network interfaces is here. How to guides: Home Router

The crucial part I missed is that it sets up its WAN port as the place it will connect to your network. From its perspective this makes perfect sense. The AREDN network is the LAN and the outside world is the WAN. Well maybe that makes sense. I mean, my network is how it will reach the Internet. If I put a radio on one of its LAN ports, that's where the mesh network would be.

First network interface is now Host-only. I had top create an interface "VBoxManage hostonlyif create" because File->Preferences no longer has "Network" huh. STILL NO GO. Out of the (virtual!) box it supposedly has DHCP enabled on WAN. NOT ON the VM image!! I see only static entries in /etc/config/network.

on QEMU

Just keep on trying. I already installed QEMU on Murre but now installing QEMU on Bellman. (Debian) (I figured I might as well get ready to test Raspberry Pi images too (arm))

sudo apt install qemu-system-x86 qemu-system-arm qemu-system-common

Here on Bellman I will be doing everything from the command line. I am fed up with the mysteries of the AREDN package so I am first going to load a Debian image (qemu RAW format) (or a qemu QCOW2 format). Then openwrt. Finally, AREDN.

qemu-system-x86_64 --enable-kvm -m 1G -smp 2 -hda debian-12-nocloud-amd64.qcow2 -nographic \
-netdev user,id=debnet -device e1000,netdev=debnet

Screenless options are explored here: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6710555/how-to-use-qemu-to-run-a-non-gui-os-on-the-terminal The option"-nographic" works fine for me, I can see console output in my shell terminal window and just type away just like being there.

Log in as "root" (no password). There you go. When done, type "poweroff". Only but now you need networking which is the whole point, really. By default I can see "ip a" looks like there is a 10.x.x.x net on ens3. It works out of the box with NAT, I can do this from the guest

apt update
apt install ssh-client
ssh [email protected]
(base) bwilson@bellman:~$ who
bwilson  pts/0        2024-12-12 20:10 (192.168.123.99)
bwilson  pts/2        2024-12-12 20:25 (192.168.123.99)
bwilson  pts/3        2024-12-12 20:47 (192.168.123.2) <---------------- ta da

Learn more about networking: https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/QEMU/Networking and here https://wiki.qemu.org/Features/HelperNetworking

Set up a TAP interface

sudo chmod u+s /usr/lib/qemu/qemu-bridge-helper

sudo mkdir /etc/qemu

echo "allow br0" | sudo tee /etc/qemu/bridge.conf

Build your own

Source code is in github https://github.com/aredn/aredn

I installed docker on Murre for this.

Resources

Go to https://arednmesh.org/ for information on the big project; if you accidentally go to https://aredn.org/ you will see a long manifesto about trademarks, whew. Glad I missed all that.