Yes, deb.torproject.org
is also served through via an Onion Service: http://apow7mjfryruh65chtdydfmqfpj5btws7nbocgtaovhvezgccyjazpqd.onion/
Note: The symbol # refers to running the code as root. This means you should have access to a user account with system administration privileges, i.e. your user should be in the sudo group.
To use Apt over Tor, the apt transport needs to be installed:
# apt install apt-transport-tor
Then you need to add the following entries to /etc/apt/sources.list
or a new file in /etc/apt/sources.list.d/
:
# Untuk stable version.
deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/deb.torproject.org-keyring.gpg] tor+http://apow7mjfryruh65chtdydfmqfpj5btws7nbocgtaovhvezgccyjazpqd.onion/torproject.org <DISTRIBUTION> main
# Untuk unstable version.
deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/deb.torproject.org-keyring.gpg] tor+http://apow7mjfryruh65chtdydfmqfpj5btws7nbocgtaovhvezgccyjazpqd.onion/torproject.org tor-nightly-main-<DISTRIBUTION> main
Replace <DISTRIBUTION>
with your Operating System codename. Run lsb_release -c
or cat /etc/debian_version
to check the Operating System version.
Since Debian bookworm you can also use the more modern deb822-style:
# echo "\
Types: deb deb-src
Components: main
Suites: bookworm
URIs: tor+http://apow7mjfryruh65chtdydfmqfpj5btws7nbocgtaovhvezgccyjazpqd.onion/torproject.org
Architectures: amd64 arm64 i386
Signed-By: /usr/share/keyrings/deb.torproject.org-keyring.gpg
" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/tor.sources