* fix: merge version ranges when adding existing package signer (#3125) * fix: merge version ranges when adding existing package signer Previously, add_package_signer unconditionally inserted the new version range, overwriting any existing authorization for that signer. Now it OR-merges the new range with the existing one, so running signer add multiple times accumulates permissions rather than replacing them. * add --merge flag to registry package signer add Default behavior remains overwrite. When --merge is passed, the new version range is OR-merged with the existing one, allowing admins to accumulate permissions incrementally. * add missing attribute to TS type * make merge optional * upsert instead of insert * VersionRange::None on upsert * fix: header color in zoom --------- Co-authored-by: Dominion5254 <musashidisciple@proton.me>
What is StartOS?
StartOS is an open-source Linux distribution for running a personal server. It handles discovery, installation, network configuration, data backup, dependency management, and health monitoring of self-hosted services.
Tech stack: Rust backend (Tokio/Axum), Angular frontend, Node.js container runtime with LXC, and a custom diff-based database (Patch-DB) for reactive state synchronization.
Services run in isolated LXC containers, packaged as S9PKs — a signed, merkle-archived format that supports partial downloads and cryptographic verification.
What can you do with it?
StartOS lets you self-host services that would otherwise depend on third-party cloud providers — giving you full ownership of your data and infrastructure.
Browse available services on the Start9 Marketplace, including:
- Bitcoin & Lightning — Run a full Bitcoin node, Lightning node, BTCPay Server, and other payment infrastructure
- Communication — Self-host Matrix, SimpleX, or other messaging platforms
- Cloud Storage — Run Nextcloud, Vaultwarden, and other productivity tools
Services are added by the community. If a service you want isn't available, you can package it yourself.
Getting StartOS
Buy a Start9 server
The easiest path. Buy a server from Start9 and plug it in.
Build your own
Install StartOS on your own hardware. Follow one of the DIY guides. Reasons to go this route:
- You already have compatible hardware
- You want to save on shipping costs
- You prefer not to share your physical address
- You enjoy building things
Build from source
See CONTRIBUTING.md for environment setup, build instructions, and development workflow.
Contributing
There are multiple ways to contribute: work directly on StartOS, package a service for the marketplace, or help with documentation and guides. See CONTRIBUTING.md or visit start9.com/contribute.
To report security issues, email security@start9.com.