A wrapper of Syncthing for Android.
Status: "Maintenance mode" - Co-maintainers welcometl;dr: The app is still kept up to date, and contributions are still welcome - however even reviews for those can take a long time. Co-maintainers are very welcome - get in touch if you are interested.
No-one is dedicating significant time into development or reviews. It's still kept up to date with Syncthing, Android and dependencies under the wider Syncthing project umbrella on a best effort basis. Contributions are reviewed, however available time for that is scarce so it will take a while. And obviously it depends both on the size/clarity of the change and (admittedly subjective) relevance of it - chance of successful and speedier reviews is higher if your change is targeted and small.
No feature request taken (feature contributions case-by-case)Handling feature requests use up the little time that is present to keep the app up-to-date, and there is no feature development happening. So unless you are opening a feature request to discuss your own contribution before jumping into coding, the request will be closed directly with some template answer pointing at this section.
The project is translated on Transifex.
Language mappings are defined in .tx/config
, with the second code being the one from transifex. Google play supported languages: https://support.google.com/googleplay/android-developer/table/4419860. Android supported languages: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7973023/what-is-the-list-of-supported-languages-locales-on-android. If a new language is added on transifex that's not supported, add them to deleteUnsupportedPlayTranslations
in app/build.gradle
.
These dependencies and instructions are necessary for building from the command line. If you build using Docker or Android Studio, you don't need to set up and follow them separately.
Download SDK command line tools from https://developer.android.com/studio#command-line-tools-only.
Unpack the downloaded archive to an empty folder. This path is going to become your ANDROID_HOME
folder.
Inside the unpacked cmdline-tools
folder, create yet another folder called latest
, then move everything else inside it, so that the final folder hierarchy looks as follows.
cmdline-tools/latest/bin
cmdline-tools/latest/lib
cmdline-tools/latest/source.properties
cmdline-tools/latest/NOTICE.txt
Navigate inside cmdline-tools/latest/bin
, then execute
./sdkmanager "platform-tools" "build-tools;<version>" "platforms;android-<version>" "extras;android;m2repository" "ndk;<version>"
The required tools and NDK will be downloaded automatically.
NOTE: You should check Dockerfile for the specific version numbers to insert in the command above.
$PATH
, you might need to set $JAVA_HOME
accordingly)git clone https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing-android.git --recursive
Alternatively, if already present on the disk, run
git submodule init && git submodule update
in the project folder.ANDROID_HOME
environment variable is set to the path containing the Android SDK (see Dependecies).syncthing-android
, then build the APK file with
./gradlew buildNative
./gradlew assembleDebug
app-debug.apk
will be present inside app/build/outputs/apk/debug
.NOTE: On Windows, you must use the Command Prompt (and not PowerShell) to compile. When doing so, in the commands replace all forward slashes /
with backslashes \
.
The project is licensed under the MPLv2.
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
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