Google has their own utility for verifying APK signatures on a desktop
machine since Java's jarsigner is bad for the task. For example, it
acts as if an unsigned APK validates. And to check whether an APK is
unsigned using jarsigner is difficult.
apksigner also does the v2 signatures, so it will have to be used
eventually anyway. It is already in Debian/stretch and can be
available in jessie-backports if need be.
https://android.googlesource.com/platform/tools/apksighttps://packages.debian.org/apksigner
There are two SHA1 git commit IDs that fdroidserver includes in the builds
it makes: fdroidserverid and buildserverid. Originally, these were inserted
into AndroidManifest.xml, but that makes the build not reproducible. So
instead they are included as separate files in the APK's META-INF/ folder.
If those files exist in the signed APK, they will be part of the signature
and need to also be included in the unsigned APK for it to validate.
This makes the jarsigner the ultimate and only judge of whether two APKs
match. This is the best tool since APK signatures are jar signatures. This
should be eventually updated to use the official Android APK signing tool
called apksigner.
https://android.googlesource.com/platform/tools/apksig/
The ZIP format allows multiple entries with the exact same filename, and on
top of that, it does not allow deleting or updating entries. To make the
`fdroid verify` procedure failsafe, it needs to create a new temporary APK
that is made up on the contents of the "unsigned APK" and the signature
from the "signed APK". Since it would be possible to give a signed APK as
in the unsigned one's position, `fdroid verify` was not able to update the
signature since it was just adding the new signature to the end of the ZIP
file. When reading a ZIP, the first entry is used.
This is a bit different than index.jar: instead of their being index.xml
and index_unsigned.jar, the presense of index-v1.json means that there is
unsigned data. That file is then stuck into a jar and signed by the
signing process. index-v1.json is never published to the repo. It is
included in the binary transparency log, if that is enabled.
If there are graphics files that are in repo/ but there is no metadata for
the associated app, then do not include the graphics in the index. Issue a
warning about this.
This looks for standard graphics assets in two standardized locations, one
in metadata/ subdirs and another in fastlane's standard dirs in the app's
source repo. When it finds them, it copies them into the repo, where they
will then be included in the index for use by fdroidclient. The images in
the metadata/ folder of fdroiddata take precendence over the files in the
app's source repo.
So like this for including graphics in fdroiddata:
metadata/packageName/locale/filename.(png|jpg|jpeg)
for example:
metadata/org.videolan.vlc/en-US/featureGraphic.png
or
metadata/info.guardianproject.ripple/zh-CN/phoneScreenshots/screenshot1.png
Including graphics in fdroiddata would be optional. The prefered way to get
graphics into the repo would be for the files to be in the git repo in a
standard location. This fastlane layout is currently supported:
https://github.com/fastlane/fastlane/blob/1.109.0/supply/README.md#images-and-screenshots
This just makes it easier for people writing build recipes. Rewriting will
output a list of strings as well.
The test index.xml and categories.txt are updated to include the new number
categories, and the changed CurrentVersionCode to 2147483647 (MAX_VALUE)
This syncs up the field names between the fdroiddata .yml files, the keys
used in the implementation in fdroidserver, the index data format, and the
final data structures in fdroidclient. This makes it easier for devs to
follow, and makes the Jackson parsing library automatically handle
converting the data from the index file to Java instances.
This bumps the metadata version since the apkcache will have to be
discarded.
Here are the name changes:
* apkname --> apkName
* id --> packageName
* sha256 --> hash
* version --> versionName
* versioncode --> versionCode
tests/repo/index.xml was changed only to bump the metadata version
from 17 to 18.
Using datetime instances as the internal format makes it much easier to
convert between the formats needed for index.xml and index-v1. apkcache
still uses time tuples and known_apks.txt still uses the ISO date.
Python encode/decode libs work directly with dicts, so the internal dict
can just be passed directly to any of these libs (pyyaml, pyjson, msgpack,
simplejson, etc). This still generates the exact same index.xml as before.
This converts the internal format for the repo timestamp to a datetime
instance, which can be easily converted to UNIX time in seconds for XML
and UNIX time in milliseconds for the new index formats. UNIX time in
milliseconds is directly serialized into a java.util.Date instance by
Jackson.
The ever troublesome gpjenkins box needs to use HTTPS mirrors. Plus it
improves the security of the buildserver, since there have been CVEs that
HTTPS would protect against:
https://www.debian.org/security/2016/dsa-3733
Google is pushing gradle towards downloading all the SDK components that it
needs, rather than having a preconfigured SDK installed. The buildserver
strongly supports the old model, with added checksum checking even. We can
still support the old model by pre-configuring the SDK and locking it down
as root. This can then also support the new model by setting the file perms
so that new packages can be auto-installed, but they cannot overwrite any
packages that come pre-installed and pre-verified.
fdroiddata!2096
closes#247
A Binary Transparency Log is a append only log of all binaries published by
a repo. This is useful for people to find whether the binary they have
matches what F-Droid has published, and also makes it more difficult for
the published history to be changed without notice, or for a server to give
specific users custom malware binaries.
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2014/02/open-letter-to-tech-companies
gradle will now automatically download and install missing bits of the
Android SDK. While we prefer to have the SDK packages fully verified, we
should allow this behavior on the buildserver to ensure that builds work
even when the buildserver can't be updated. Since each build starts from a
clean snapshot, this auto-installed build-tools will only be used for the
single build, so it won't affect other apps.