A faster heart for F-Droid. Our new server is here

(f-droid.org)

143 points | by kasabali 3 hours ago

13 comments

  • Aurornis 45 minutes ago
    > this server is physically held by a long time contributor with a proven track record of securely hosting services. We can control it remotely, we know exactly where it is, and we know who has access.

    I can’t be the only one who read this and had flashbacks to projects that fell apart because one person had the physical server in their basement or a rack at their workplace and it became a sticking point when an argument arose.

    I know self-hosting is held as a point of pride by many, but in my experience you’re still better off putting lower cost hardware in a cheap colo with the contract going to the business entity which has defined ownership and procedures. Sending it over to a single member to put somewhere puts a lot of control into that one person’s domain.

    I hope for the best for this team and I’m leaning toward believing that this person really is trusted and capable, but I would strongly recommend against these arrangements in any form in general.

    EDIT: F-Droid received a $400,000 grant from a single source this year ( https://f-droid.org/2025/02/05/f-droid-awarded-otf-grant.htm... ) so now I’m even more confused about how they decided to hand this server to a single team member to host in unspoken conditions instead of paying basic colocation expenses.

    • lrvick 23 minutes ago
      400K would go -fast- if they stuck to a traditional colo setup. Donations like this are rare and it may be all they get for a decade.

      Personally I would feel better about round robin across multiple maintainer-home-hosted machines.

      • Aurornis 17 minutes ago
        > 400K would go -fast- if they stuck to a traditional colo setup.

        I don’t know where you’re pricing coloration, but I could host a single server indefinitely from the interest alone on $400K at the (very nice) data centers I’ve used.

        Collocation is not that expensive. I’m not understanding how you think $400K would disappear “fast” unless you think it’s thousands of dollars per month?

      • pilif 20 minutes ago
        400k would last me 13 years for a rack, power and 10Gbit/s bandwidth at my colo place (Switzerland, traditionally high prices)
        • dotancohen 17 minutes ago
          Yes, but that's not their only expense.
          • Aurornis 13 minutes ago
            Yes, but that’s not the last or only donation they’re receiving either.
          • Craighead 15 minutes ago
            [dead]
    • silisili 34 minutes ago
      Yup. But the same can happen in shared hosting/colo/aws just as easily if only one person controls the keys to the kingdom. I know of at least a handful of open source projects that had to essentially start over because the leader went AWOL or a big fight happened.

      That said, I still think that hosting a server in a member's house is a terrible decision for a project.

      • Aurornis 31 minutes ago
        > if only one person controls the keys to the kingdom

        True, which is why I said the important parts need to be held by the legal entity representing the organization. If one person tries to hold it hostage, it becomes a matter of demonstrating that person doesn’t legally have access any more.

        I’ve also seen projects fall apart because they forgot to transfer some key element into the legal entity. A common one is the domain name, which might have been registered by one person and then just never transferred over. Nobody notices until that person has a falling out and starts holding the domain name hostage.

  • debugnik 1 minute ago
    [delayed]
  • mcsniff 1 hour ago
    Ugh. This 100% shows how janky and unmaintained their setup is.

    All the hand waving and excuses around global supply chains, quotes, etc...it took pretty long for them to acquire commodity hardware and shove it in a special someone's basement and they're trying to make it seem like a good thing?

    F-Droid is often discussed in the GrapheneOS community, the concerns around centralization and signing are valid.

    I understand this is a volunteer effort, but it's not a good look.

    • lrvick 1 hour ago
      As someone that has run many volunteer open source communities and projects for more than 2 decades, I totally get how big "small" wins like this are.

      The internet is run on binaries compiled in servers in random basements and you should be thankful for those basements because the corpos are never going to actually help fund any of it.

    • lukan 1 hour ago
      "I understand this is a volunteer effort, but it's not a good look."

      I would agree, that it is not a good look for this society, to lament so much about the big evil corporations and invest so little in the free alternatives.

    • magguzu 2 minutes ago
      Graphene is a great product but their incessant mud slinging at any service that isn't theirs is tiresome at best.

      Some of their points are valid but way too often they're unable to accept that different services aren't always trying to solve the same problem.

    • xandrius 1 hour ago
      "Nothing is ever good enough" (tm)
    • viraptor 1 hour ago
      > shove it in a special someone's basement

      They didn't say what conditions it's held in. You're just adding FUD, please stop. It could be under the bed, it could be in a professional server room of the company ran by the mentioned contributor.

      • lrvick 36 minutes ago
        100%. Just as an example I have several racks at home, business fiber, battery backup, and a propane generator as a last resort. Also 4th amendment protections so no one gets access without me knowing about it. I host a lot of things at home and trust it more than any DC.
        • hypeatei 10 minutes ago
          Isn't a business line quite expensive to maintain per month along with a hefty upfront cost? For a smaller team with a tight budget, just going somewhere with all of that stuff included is probably cheaper and easier like a colo DC.

          > Also 4th amendment protections so no one gets access without me knowing about it

          laughs in FISA

    • cyberax 28 minutes ago
      I read it a bit differently: you don't need to be a mega-corp with millions of servers to actually make a difference for the better. It really doesn't take much!

      Also, even 12-year-old hardware is wicked fast.

      • Aurornis 13 minutes ago
        The issue isn’t the hardware, it’s the fact that it’s hosted somewhere private in conditions they wont name under the control of a single member. Typically colo providers are used for this.
  • kasabali 3 hours ago
    Context: "F-Droid build servers can't build modern Android apps due to outdated CPUs" (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44884709)
  • j1elo 7 minutes ago
    I wonder if anyone knows about Droid-ify. Whether it it a safe option, or better to stay away of it?

    It showed up one day while I searched about why F-Droid was always so extremely slow to update and download... then trying Droid-ify, that was never a problem any more, it clearly had much better connectivity (or simply less users?)

    • kasabali 1 minute ago
      it's a different client using same servers. fdroid official client is just super buggy.
  • valgaze 2 hours ago
    Hmm:

    “F-Droid is not hosted in just any data center where commodity hardware is managed by some unknown staff. We worked out a special arrangement so that this server is physically held by a long time contributor with a proven track record of securely hosting services. We can control it remotely, we know exactly where it is, and we know who has access.”

    • kube-system 10 minutes ago
      Yikes. You don't need a "special arrangement" for those requirements. This is the bare minimum at many professionally run colocation data centers. There is not a security requirement that can't be met by a data center -- being secure to your requirements is a critical part of their business.

      Maybe the person who wrote that is only available with smaller time hosting services or colo-by-the-rack-unit type services where remote-hands services are more commonly relied on. But you don't need to use these services. You can easily get a locked cabinet (or even just a 1/4 cabinet) only you can access.

    • skiing_crawling 1 hour ago
      I never questioned or thought twice about F-Droid's trustworthiness until I read that. It makes it sound like a very amateurish operation.

      I had passively assumed something like this would be a Cloud VM + DB + buckets. The "hardware upgrade" they are talking about would have been a couple clicks to change the VM type, a total nothingburger. Now I can only imagine a janky setup in some random (to me) guy's closet.

      In any case, I'm more curious to know exactly what kind hardware is required for F-Droid, they didn't mention any specifics about CPU, Memory, Storage etc.

      • AndrewDucker 1 hour ago
        For a single server why would you use cloud services rather than go the self-owned route?
        • skiing_crawling 1 hour ago
          A "single server" covers a pretty large range of scale, its more about how F-droid is used and perceived. Package repos are infrastructure, and reliability is important. A server behind someone's TV is much more susceptible to power outages, network issues, accidents, and tampering. Again, I don't know that's the case since they didn't really say anything specific.

          > not hosted in just any data center where commodity hardware is managed by some unknown staff

          I took this to mean it's not in a colo facility either, assumed it mean't someone's home, AKA residential power and internet.

          • AndrewDucker 1 hour ago
            Ah. I took "not just any data center" to mean "in a specific co-location facility where they trust the person responsible for it".

            I agree that "behind someone's TV" would be a terrible idea.

      • lrvick 26 minutes ago
        > It makes it sound like a very amateurish operation.

        Wait until you find out how every major Linux distributions and software that powers the internet is maintained. It is all a wildly under-funded shit show, and yet we do it anyway because letting the corpos run it all is even worse.

    • IshKebab 2 hours ago
      "F-Droid is not hosted in a data centre with proper procedures, access controls, and people whose jobs are on the line. Instead it's in some guy's bedroom."

      Not reassuring.

      • PaulKeeble 1 hour ago
        It could just be a colo, there are still plenty of data centres around the globe that will sell you a space in a shared rack with a certain power density per U of space. The list of people who can access that shared locked rack is likely a known quantity with most such organisations and I know in the past we had some details of the people who were responsible for it
      • a3w 1 hour ago
        Depends on the thread model, which one is worse.

        State actor? Gets into data centre, or has to break into a privately owned apartment.

        Criminal/3rd party state intelligence service? Could get into both, at a risk or with blackmail, threats, or violence.

        Dumb accidents? Well, all buildings can burn or have an power outage.

        • Aurornis 34 minutes ago
          > State actor? Gets into data centre, or has to break into a privately owned apartment.

          I don’t think a state actor would actually break in to either in this case, but if they did then breaking into the private apartment would be a dream come true. Breaking into a data center requires coordination and ensuring a lot of people with access and visibility stay quiet. Breaking into someone’s apartment means waiting until they’re away from the premises for a while and then going in.

          Getting a warrant for a private residence also would likely give them access to all electronic devices there as no 3rd party is keeping billing records of which hardware is used for the service.

          > Dumb accidents? Well, all buildings can burn or have an power outage.

          Data centers are built with redundant network connectivity, backup power, and fire suppression. Accidents can happen at both, but that’s not the question. The question is their relative frequency, which is where the data center is far superior.

      • pwndByDeath 1 hour ago
        I think there are countless examples of worse failures by organisations that meet your criteria for far more valuable assets than some free apps.
      • TomatoCo 1 hour ago
        In some respects, having your entire reputation on the line matters just as much. And sure, someone might have a server cage in their residence, or maybe they run their own small business and it's there. But the vagueness is troubling, I agree.

        A picture of the "living conditions" for the server would go a long way.

      • gpm 1 hour ago
        Eh...

        The set of people who can maliciously modify it is the people who run f-droid, instead of the cloud provider and the people who run f-droid.

        It'd be nice if we didn't have to trust the people who run f-droid, but given we do I see an argument that it's better for them to run the hardware so we only have to trust them and not someone else as well.

        • lrvick 1 hour ago
          You actually do not have to trust the people who run f-droid for those apps whose maintainers enroll in reproducible builds and multi-party signing, which only f-droid supports unlike any alternatives.
          • gpm 1 hour ago
            That looks cool, which might just be the point of your comment, but I don't think it actually changes the argument here.

            You still have to trust the app store to some extent. On first use, you're trusting f-droid to give you the copy of the app with appropriate signatures. Running in someone else's data-center still means you need to trust that data-center plus the people setting up the app store, instead of just the app store. It's just a breach of trust is less consequential since the attacker needs to catch the first install (of apps that even use that technology).

            • lrvick 39 minutes ago
              F-droid makes the most sense when shipped as the system appstore, along with pinned CA keychains as Calyxos did. Ideally f-droid was compiled from source and validated by the rom devs.

              The F-droid app itself can then verify signatures from both third party developers and first party builds on an f-droid machine.

              For all its faults (of which there are many) it is still a leaps and bounds better trust story than say Google Play. Developers can only publish code, and optional signatures, but not binaries.

              Combine that with distributed reproducible builds with signed evidence validated by the app and you end up not having to trust anything but the f-droid app itself on your device.

        • ejj28 1 hour ago
          The cloud isn't the only other option, they could still own and run their own hardware but do it in a proper colocation datacenter.
      • ugh123 1 hour ago
        The 'cloud' has come full circle
  • PaulKeeble 1 hour ago
    Modern machines go up to really mental levels of performance when you think about it and for a lot of small scale things like F droid I doubt it takes a lot of hardware to actually host it. A lot of its going to be static files so a basic web server could put through 100s of thousands of requests and even on a modest machine saturate 10 gbps which I suspect is enough for what they do.

    This just reads to me like they have racked a box in a colo with a known person running the shared rack rather than someone’s basement but who really knows they aren't exactly handing out details.

    • wtallis 53 minutes ago
      This isn't about a server for hosting the website or package repo, it's about the server building all the packages.
  • ZiiS 26 minutes ago
    Let's focus on how they have done so much with such simple hardware, rather then comparing them to companies that do so little with so much more.
  • JimBlackwood 59 minutes ago
    While I get their setup is amateurish, it's also a good reminder of how simple setups can be.

    Saying this on HN, of course.

  • NoiseBert69 2 hours ago
    So.. what kind of hardware did they buy?
    • IshKebab 2 hours ago
      Yeah kind of conspicuously absent! They said

      > The previous server was 12 year old hardware

      which is pretty mad. You can buy a second hand system with tons of ram and a 16-core Ryzen for like $400. 12-year old hardware is only marginally faster than a RPi 5.

      • DaSHacka 1 hour ago
        > 12-year old hardware is only marginally faster than a RPi 5.

        A Dell R620 is over 12 years old and WAY faster than a RPi 5 though...

        Sure, it'll be way less power efficient, but I'd definitely trust it to serve more concurrent users than a RPi.

      • phantom784 1 hour ago
        Plus the fact that it's been running for 5 years. Does that mean they bought 7 year old hardware back then? Or is that just when it was last restarted?
      • cvwright 1 hour ago
        Unfortunately you can’t even get the RAM for $400 anymore.
  • whalesalad 22 minutes ago
    Absolutely zero details on the old or new server.
  • anticorporate 23 minutes ago
    It's frankly embarrassing how many of the comments on this thread are some version of looking at the XKCD "dependency" meme and deciding the best course of action is to throw spitballs at the maintainers of the critical project holding everything else up.
  • websiteapi 1 hour ago
    > Another important part of this story is where the server lives and how it is managed. F-Droid is not hosted in just any data center where commodity hardware is managed by some unknown staff.

    > The previous server was 12 year old hardware and had been running for about five years. In infrastructure terms, that is a lifetime. It served F-Droid well, but it was reaching the point where speed and maintenance overhead were becoming a daily burden.

    lol. if they're gonna use gitlab just use a proper setup - bigco is already in the critical path...