Daniel Martí 6606a76848 CI: Do not trust the SDK with reading echo y
It will randomly fail, so be extra careful. `yes` or echoing without the
sleep will also fail because the SDK sucks at reading a single line.

Also remove the ANDROID_HOME test since this now runs on the public
workers with their default image, which don't have the SDK preinstalled.

And ignore SDK install errors, since it likes to complain about not
being able to stop the ADB server. If anything doesn't install properly,
it will cause errors down the line and CI will fail anyway.
2016-03-21 14:43:59 +00:00
2016-02-16 20:27:50 +00:00
2015-09-25 22:00:24 -07:00
2015-10-27 09:39:00 +03:00
2016-02-15 16:30:40 +00:00
2016-02-03 13:33:04 -05:00
2016-02-15 16:34:41 +00:00
2016-02-28 22:46:53 +00:00
2016-02-15 16:30:40 +00:00
2016-02-15 16:30:40 +00:00
2015-08-24 10:35:55 -07:00
2016-02-15 16:35:39 +00:00

F-Droid Client

build status Translation status

Client for F-Droid, the Free Software repository system for Android.

Building with Gradle

cd F-Droid
./gradlew assembleRelease

Direct download

You can download the application directly from our site or browse it in the repo.

Contributing

See our Contributing doc for information on how to report issues, translate the app into your language or help with development.

IRC

We are on #fdroid and #fdroid-dev on Freenode. We hold weekly dev meetings on #fdroid-dev on Tuesdays at 20h UTC, which usually last half an hour.

FAQ

  • Why does F-Droid require "Unknown Sources" to install apps by default?

Because a regular Android app cannot act as a package manager on its own. To do so, it would require system privileges (see below), similar to what Google Play does.

  • Can I avoid enabling "Unknown Sources" by installing F-Droid as a privileged system app?

This used to be the case, but no longer is. Now the Privileged Extension is the one that should be placed in the system. It can be bundled with a ROM or installed via a zip, or alternatively F-Droid can install it as a system app using root.

License

This program is Free Software: You can use, study share and improve it at your will. Specifically you can redistribute and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

Some icons are made by Picol, Icomoon or Dave Gandy from Flaticon or by Google and are licensed by Creative Commons BY 3.0.

Other icons are from the Material Design Icon set released under an Attribution 4.0 International license.

Description
No description provided
Readme GPL-3.0 46 MiB
Languages
Java 98.5%
Shell 0.6%
Python 0.6%
AIDL 0.2%
HTML 0.1%