FFUpdater: Updater for privacy friendly browser - Mirror of GitHub
Tobi823 99602f60e8 - cleanup | 2 年之前 | |
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.github | 3 年之前 | |
dev | 2 年之前 | |
fastlane | 2 年之前 | |
ffupdater | 2 年之前 | |
gradle | 3 年之前 | |
.gitignore | 2 年之前 | |
CHANGELOG.md | 2 年之前 | |
GOALS.md | 4 年之前 | |
HOW_TO_CONTRIBUTE.md | 3 年之前 | |
LICENSE | 9 年之前 | |
README.md | 2 年之前 | |
build.gradle | 2 年之前 | |
gradle.properties | 2 年之前 | |
gradlew | 3 年之前 | |
gradlew.bat | 3 年之前 | |
run_integration_tests.sh | 4 年之前 | |
run_unit_tests.sh | 4 年之前 | |
settings.gradle | 9 年之前 |
Download, install and update these privacy friendly browsers:
and:
FFUpdater will check periodically for updates and will display a notification when an update is available. This feature itself can be disabled and the check frequency can be changed.
FFUpdater will also automatically download the app updates in the background if the current network is unmetered and the device has enough storage.
Feel free to check my source code ;)
The applications are downloaded from these locations:
The main distribution method of FFUpdater remains F-Droid - this will not change. But you can use the APK files or the F-Droid repository to quickly install fixed versions.
You need to uninstall FFUpdater every time you switch between F-Droid version and my version.
I don't know if F-Droid shows an update notification when you have my version installed. Maybe you need to manually check for updates in the F-Droid app.
My versions will be signed with:
DN: CN=Tobi823, O=FFUpdater, ST=Germany, C=DE
SHA-256 digest: f4e642bb85cbbcfd7302b2cbcbd346993a41067c27d995df492c9d0d38747e62
SHA-1 digest: b432e9eb74512c0fa58c1ec45912a670f8dfa8e9
MD5 digest: 78a34e36cedd844954726f1e2076642c
The official F-Droid Android client sometimes has problems accessing the APK file from my F-Droid repository. But other clients like "Foxy Droid" work fine. Does anyone know the reason for this? Does the official F-Droid client has an internal cache and therefore needs more time before it can access a new version from my repository?
The APK files are available on GitHub and GitLab.
Click here to add the FFUpdater repository to your F-Droid client.
If the link is not clickable, you can use this help website https://tobi823.github.io/ffupdaterrepo.html.
Repository address: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Tobi823/ffupdaterrepo/master/fdroid/repo
Fingerprint: 6E4E6A597D289CB2D4D4F0E4B792E14CCE070BDA6C47AF4918B342FA51F2DC89
It seems that this F-Droid repository is sometimes a little buggy. If F-Droid fails to download FFUpdater, try to install the version from the official F-Droid repository first.
On the app page under the item "Versions" you can see from which repository (my FFUpdater repository or the official F-Droid repository) the app version was installed
02.01.2022 https://github.com/Tobi823/ffupdater/issues/101
Styx is only temporarily removed from Google Play:
Sorry for the premature end of Styx. But in the future the Styx browser will appear again. Currently styx is migrated to Fulguris base. When this is completed then Styx will return as well as in the Play Store.
30.12.2021: https://github.com/Tobi823/ffupdater/issues/101
It seems that @jamal2362 does not maintain the Styx browser any longer:
Due to the deleted GitHub repository, Styx cannot be downloaded by FFUpdater. And even if - end users should not use a browser that is no longer updated.
17.04.2021: https://github.com/Tobi823/ffupdater/issues/35 Answer from the Kiwi developer:
It's actually quite simple, Kiwi earns money for every search it forwards to Yahoo or Microsoft Bing.
It seems that the developers have to forward search requests to their servers and then to the search engine in order to get paid by the search engine.
The parameters and integration method are defined by the search engines themselves, we don't have our words at all how the integration is done.
They [Yahoo or Microsoft Bing] have a standard guide on how to integrate, either you follow this guide, or you don't work with them.
I guess it's fine. Although i don't like it, i understand that the money for the app development has to come from somewhere (even Firefox is paid to use "Google" as the default search engine).
But I think that Kiwi should not be managed by FFUpdater because this browser has additional usability features and no additional privacy features. FFUpdater is about privacy and not usability.
02.12.2021: End of support for Firefox Lockwise https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/end-of-support-firefox-lockwise
Mozilla will end support for the Firefox Lockwise app on Android and iOS, effective December 13, 2021.
14.03.2021: The latest release of Firefox Lite is not longer signed and thereby can't be used to upgrade an existing Firefox Lite installation. Moreover the developers haven't responded to the Github issue "[BUG] Unsigned apk ?" from 30.01.2021 https://github.com/mozilla-mobile/FirefoxLite/issues/5353. And Firefox Lite will only receive bug fixes in the future:
Firefox Lite is currently in Maintenance Mode. No active feature is being done on the product. Older Pull Requests and Issues have been marked with the archived label and have been closed. However, if you feel an issue is critical enough to be re-opened, please leave a note on the issue with an explanation.
30.06.2021: Firefox Lite is removed from Google Play and Galaxy Store, its repository is archived (https://github.com/mozilla-mobile/FirefoxLite) and development stopped.
Effective June 30, 2021, this app will no longer receive security or other updates. Download the official Firefox Android app now for a fast, private & safe web browser.
These are the reasons why I will remove Firefox Lite.
16.05.2020: Mozilla wants to migrate from Fennec to Fenix. Fennec Beta and Fennec Nightly are already end-of-life and Fennec Release will be soon.
27.07.2020: 68.11.0 is the last released update for Fennec version, all Fennec browsers are deprecated.
Fennec is being replaced by our new state-of-the-art mobile browser codenamed "Fenix". We're slowly migrating users in order to make sure the experience is as painless and as enjoyable as possible. We started to migrate users who were using Fennec Nightly in January (bug 1608882). It took us several weeks to be sure of the result and to finally offer Fenix Nightly to all users using Fennec Nightly. Another few weeks later, we repeated the same process with Fennec Beta (bug 1614287). Fenix Beta has been offered to the whole Fennec Beta population on April 22nd. We're planning to do the same with Fennec Release sometimes this year. The schedule is still to be determined.
The Google Play Store[1] has a lot of nice features, but it's still pretty basic whenever a software publisher wants to slowly migrate users. Once a migration is started, we can't provide any Fennec updates to the population who wasn't offered Fenix, yet. I can say this restriction is painful to manage for Android developers, Mozilla included. Because of it, we had to stop shipping Fennec Nightly/Beta APKs at the beginning of each migration. This explains the dates of the last builds. At the same time, we stopped building Fennec Nightly/Beta because it enabled us to save technical resources[2] as well as people's time[3].
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1627518
Use Android Studio to clone and run the app. Nothing special needs to be done.
Since I left F-Droid (and Android/Smartphones) about a year ago, I am looking for a new maintainer to take over. Unfortunately the upstream issue I opened years ago is still not solved in 2019. While Fennec F-Droid is back in the mainline repo and other binary repos do serve Firefox, some might still prefer this updater. So as I said: Maintainers welcome. The main task should be to test the last few merge requests (especially the background update stuff) and release a new version. New Maintainer: https://notabug.org/Tobiwan/ffupdater
FFUpdater -- Updater for privacy friendly browser
Copyright (C) 2019-2021 Tobias Hellmann https://github.com/Tobi823
Copyright (C) 2015-2019 Boris Kraut <krt@nurfuerspam.de>
This program is free software: you can redistribute it 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.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.