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You are here: Home / News / Debian News / Kali Linux 1.0, a new Debian derivative

Kali Linux 1.0, a new Debian derivative

March 13, 2013 by Raphaël Hertzog

Today, during Blackhat Europe, Offensive Security announced the availability of Kali Linux 1.0, which aims to be the most advanced, robust, and stable penetration testing distribution to date. It is the successor of Backtrack Linux.

kali

Kali’s choice of Debian

Kali’s release is a significant event in the security auditing and penetration testing field, and I’m proud to see that Debian was retained as the best distribution to create this new product. Here’s what Mati Aharoni of Offensive Security told me:

Debian provides a reliable base to build a new distribution and yet can easily be customized to add bleeding edge features, thanks to the unstable and experimental distributions.

Kali’s development policies

Even though Kali was prepared in secret, from now on Kali’s development happens in the open in public git repositories. There are repositories for all the packages that have been created (or forked) as well as for the ISO images creation script.

Debian packages are maintained with git-buildpackage, pristine-tar and the associated helper tools, making it easy to integrate the latest changes of Debian.

Kali packaged several hundreds tools that relate to their field and they intend to contribute those which are DFSG-free back to Debian.

Kali’s technical infrastructure

In the last year, I have been working within the Kali team to setup large parts of their infrastructure as a proper Debian derivative.

Kali’s main ISO images are built with live-build. All the bugfixes that I contributed to Debian Live were the direct result of my work for Kali.

The git repositories are managed with gitolite. The package repositories are built with reprepro. The build daemons use rebuildd and sbuild.

The (push) mirrors are synchronized with the same tools than Debian (based on rsync), but there’s also a central server which redirects to a mirror close to you (and which is used by default everywhere). This one runs mirrorbrain (and not Raphaël Geissert’s redirector).

The ARM build daemons (armel/armhf) run on machines powered by Calxeda’s Highbank (4 cores, 4 GB RAM) that work pretty well. Even better, Offensive Security is willing to dedicate one node of this “cluster” for Debian’s own usage.

The future

This first release is not an end. It’s only the start of a journey. Not all applications have been packaged yet and there’s lot of work left to integrate everything in Debian.

I’m really looking forward to continue my collaboration with the Kali team as this has been one of the most interesting project I ever had as a Debian consultant. And also one of the few where I could really contribute something back to Debian.

Filed Under: Debian News, News Tagged With: Backtrack Linux, Debian, Derivatives, Kali Linux, News, Offensive Security

Comments

  1. za says

    March 14, 2013 at 4:39 am

    Wow, thank you for writing Kali at your blog post, Raphael! Did you go to the Blackhat Europe? I’ll find out more about this Kali project.

    • Raphaël Hertzog says

      March 14, 2013 at 8:21 am

      Nope, I did not attend Blackhat Europe.

  2. Fabian Rodriguez says

    March 14, 2013 at 6:27 am

    Congratulations on this release, specially on the collaboration and contributing back to Debian 🙂

    • Raphaël Hertzog says

      March 14, 2013 at 8:22 am

      Thank you Fabian!

  3. Elessar says

    March 14, 2013 at 10:15 am

    Why this new distribution, and how does it relate to BackTrack exactly? Both are done by Offensive Security, but is Kali simply the new BackTrack? That would be worth explaining I think, to avoid confusion among users.

    • Raphaël Hertzog says

      March 14, 2013 at 10:21 am

      Hi Elessar, I said it is the successor, so yeah it is the “new” Backtrack Linux.

  4. Martin says

    March 14, 2013 at 4:04 pm

    Congratulations to the new release!

    I wonder why it is called “Kali” Linux?

    • Sonia Hamilton says

      March 19, 2013 at 9:20 am

      Kali (“the black one”) is the Hindu mother goddess, symbol of dissolution and destruction. She destroys ignorance, maintains the world order, and … http://www.pantheon.org/articles/k/kali.html

      • Raphaël Hertzog says

        March 25, 2013 at 8:54 am

        FWIW in http://www.kali.org/news/birth-of-kali/ they explain that it’s unrelated.

  5. Smith says

    March 17, 2013 at 3:40 am

    its sad cuda support is still not there. did anyone manage to get cuda working on kali?

    • schultz says

      March 24, 2013 at 10:15 pm

      tried new versions of cuda toolkit and old, different drivers, did find that some cuda toolkits say drivers are old when they are 310.40. also changed gcc and g++ to match different versions 4.4 and the default with kali is 4.7 which will not work, did try to make cuda samples and errors even with mpi installed. then error even with make -k

      it really stinks that backtrack switched to kali linux from backtrack 5 3rc now nothing cuda works spent three days tried tons of forms, anyone with import that could get the ball rolling would help

      • Raphaël Hertzog says

        March 25, 2013 at 8:52 am

        I would like to suggest you to go discuss your issues on forums.kali.org, you’re more likely to get an answer.

  6. adep says

    April 12, 2013 at 9:31 pm

    Hi
    backtrack based on Ubuntu Kali based on Debian .Previously Backtrack was Developed by debian then went o Ubuntu
    thanks of this new good release i loved kali 🙂
    Sonia Hamilton..
    You are Right thank you

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