TorBox v.0.5.5 – OpenVPN Update, 22 March 2026

This release brings a major overhaul of the OpenVPN integration, improved bridge support, better TorBox on a Cloud compatibility, and numerous security dependency updates.

TorBox Image (about 2 GB): v.0.5.5 (22.03.2026) – SHA-256 values
TorBox mini Image (about 2 GB): v.0.5.5 (22.03.2026) – SHA-256 values
TorBox Menu only: v.0.5.5 (22.03.2026) – SHA-256 values

Alternatively, you can download the image from our TorBox cloud test installation.

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Changelog
  • Updated: OpenVPN installation script (openvpn-install.sh) received a major rewrite with AppArmor and Unix Socket support, multi-client support, improved certificate revocation handling, and new location for server.conf.
  • Updated: Bridges: meek_lite fixed, Snowflake and obfs4 bridges updated with new default bridges in torrc.
  • Updated: Predictable Network Interface Names handling fixed across all installation scripts (Debian, Ubuntu) and menu scripts.
  • Updated: Python dependency installation now uses --ignore-installed to avoid conflicts with older system-installed libraries.
  • Updated: Various Python and JavaScript libraries updated: peewee, flask-cors, cryptography, tornado, werkzeug , urllib3, pynacl, flask, pillow, pyasn1, minimatch and rollup.
  • Updated: Replaced deprecated flask_restful.reqparse with Flask’s native request.get_json() in ChatSecure.
  • New: OpenVPN multi-client support: multiple clients can now connect simultaneously.
  • New: OpenVPN client certificate revocation now automatically disconnects the specific connected client.
  • New: Two new convert scripts added to the Danger Zone: convert_to_torbox converts a TorBox mini installation to a full default TorBox installation, and convert_to_torbox_mini does the reverse.
  • Improved: Fix for kernel panic when WPA3-SAE and roaming are enabled with a Raspberry Pi Zero 2 W.
  • Fixed: Installation of libtorsocks on Debian and Ubuntu systems — the package was previously missing, which prevented torsocks from working correctly on these platforms.

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We need your feedback!!

We hope this version pleases you. However, we are dependent on feedback. It is not just about fixing bugs and improving usability, but also about supporting additional interfaces and hardware in future releases:

  • What do you like?
  • What should be improved (why and how)?
  • What would you like to see next? Which features do you request?

With the TorBox GitHub repository, it is straightforward for anyone to report issues, modify the code, and submit a pull request. Because we continue to travel, it sometimes takes longer to address issues and proposals. 

For future versions, we need to understand your requirements and what you would like to see from the Onion Services implementation. Please feel free to use the discussion forum to share your needs with us.