Replying to Avatar Dr. Hax

The #eff made a wonderful project called rayhunter. It detects modern cell site simulators (aka #stingrays, fake cell towers).

But it doesn't work out of the box on Debian and when I offered a fix (commands to compile a version for Debian), they didn't like it, suggesting that everyone who uses Debian or #Ubuntu 22.04 should set up a rust development environment & compile it themselves.

The beauty of #OpenSource is that I don't have to accept that answer. I'm forking it & adding a #Debian release

https://gitlab.hax0rbana.org/public-repos/rayhunter

I'm not familiar with #Microsoft's #GitHub CI/CD system, so I'm making automated jobs to do it in #GitLab's CI. I **will** accept pull requests to also implement it in GitHub's CI/CD, and I can mirror my fork over there after I get the feature implemented.

Hopefully the upstream maintainers will accept my feature so the project is more accessible to people, especially #journalists and #activists who might not know how to get the bleeding edge #Rust toolchain.

And if it is not accepted, then people who find out about my repo can choose between downloading a release from my CI/CD or compiling it themselves.

And that's OK. Letting people choose is a good thing. When there is a difference of opinion, spinning up another fork is great.

Who knows, maybe I'll add a #Windows release as well. 😁

Right now I have rayhunter releases building for:

- Debian 12 (bookworm)

- Debian latest (also currently bookwork)

- Ubuntu 22.04 (jammy)

- Ubuntu 24.04 (noble)

- Ubuntu latest (also currently noble)

I do not yet have a macOS build, but I am working on that right now. Once that's working the gitlab CI job will be more full featured than the GitHub build in the upstream repo.

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