#!/usr/bin/env python3 # Copy this file to config.py, then amend the settings below according to # your system configuration. # Custom path to the Android SDK, defaults to $ANDROID_HOME # sdk_path = "$ANDROID_HOME" # Custom paths to various versions of the Android NDK, defaults to 'r10e' set # to $ANDROID_NDK. Most users will have the latest at $ANDROID_NDK, which is # used by default. If a version is missing or assigned to None, it is assumed # not installed. # ndk_paths = { # 'r9b': None, # 'r10e': None, # 'r12b': "$ANDROID_NDK", # } # java_paths = { # '1.8': "/usr/lib/jvm/java-8-openjdk", # } # Build tools version to be used # build_tools = "24.0.0" # Force all build to use the above version of build -tools, good for testing # builds without having all of the possible build-tools installed. # force_build_tools = True # Command or path to binary for running Ant # ant = "ant" # Command or path to binary for running maven 3 # mvn3 = "mvn" # Command or path to binary for running Gradle # gradle = "gradle" # Set the maximum age (in days) of an index that a client should accept from # this repo. Setting it to 0 or not setting it at all disables this # functionality. If you do set this to a non-zero value, you need to ensure # that your index is updated much more frequently than the specified interval. # The same policy is applied to the archive repo, if there is one. # repo_maxage = 0 repo_url = "https://MyFirstFDroidRepo.org/fdroid/repo" repo_name = "My First F-Droid Repo Demo" repo_icon = "fdroid-icon.png" repo_description = """ This is a repository of apps to be used with F-Droid. Applications in this repository are either official binaries built by the original application developers, or are binaries built from source by the admin of f-droid.org using the tools on https://gitlab.com/u/fdroid. """ # As above, but for the archive repo. # archive_older sets the number of versions kept in the main repo, with all # older ones going to the archive. Set it to 0, and there will be no archive # repository, and no need to define the other archive_ values. archive_older = 3 archive_url = "https://f-droid.org/archive" archive_name = "My First F-Droid Archive Demo" archive_icon = "fdroid-icon.png" archive_description = """ The repository of older versions of applications from the main demo repository. """ # Normally, all apps are collected into a single app repository, like on # https://f-droid.org. For certain situations, it is better to make a repo # that is made up of APKs only from a single app. For example, an automated # build server that publishes nightly builds. # per_app_repos = True # `fdroid update` will create a link to the current version of a given app. # This provides a static path to the current APK. To disable the creation of # this link, uncomment this: # make_current_version_link = False # By default, the "current version" link will be based on the "Name" of the # app from the metadata. You can change it to use a different field from the # metadata here: # current_version_name_source = 'id' # Optionally, override home directory for gpg # gpghome = /home/fdroid/somewhere/else/.gnupg # The ID of a GPG key for making detached signatures for apks. Optional. # gpgkey = '1DBA2E89' # The key (from the keystore defined below) to be used for signing the # repository itself. This is the same name you would give to keytool or # jarsigner using -alias. (Not needed in an unsigned repository). # repo_keyalias = "fdroidrepo" # Optionally, the public key for the key defined by repo_keyalias above can # be specified here. There is no need to do this, as the public key can and # will be retrieved from the keystore when needed. However, specifying it # manually can allow some processing to take place without access to the # keystore. # repo_pubkey = "..." # The keystore to use for release keys when building. This needs to be # somewhere safe and secure, and backed up! The best way to manage these # sensitive keys is to use a "smartcard" (aka Hardware Security Module). To # configure F-Droid to use a smartcard, set the keystore file using the keyword # "NONE" (i.e. keystore = "NONE"). That makes Java find the keystore on the # smartcard based on 'smartcardoptions' below. # keystore = "~/.local/share/fdroidserver/keystore.jks" # You should not need to change these at all, unless you have a very # customized setup for using smartcards in Java with keytool/jarsigner # smartcardoptions = "-storetype PKCS11 -providerName SunPKCS11-OpenSC \ # -providerClass sun.security.pkcs11.SunPKCS11 \ # -providerArg opensc-fdroid.cfg" # The password for the keystore (at least 6 characters). If this password is # different than the keypass below, it can be OK to store the password in this # file for real use. But in general, sensitive passwords should not be stored # in text files! # keystorepass = "password1" # The password for keys - the same is used for each auto-generated key as well # as for the repository key. You should not normally store this password in a # file since it is a sensitive password. # keypass = "password2" # The distinguished name used for all keys. # keydname = "CN=Birdman, OU=Cell, O=Alcatraz, L=Alcatraz, S=California, C=US" # Use this to override the auto-generated key aliases with specific ones # for particular applications. Normally, just leave it empty. # keyaliases = {} # keyaliases['com.example.app'] = 'example' # You can also force an app to use the same key alias as another one, using # the @ prefix. # keyaliases['com.example.another.plugin'] = '@com.example.another' # The full path to the root of the repository. It must be specified in # rsync/ssh format for a remote host/path. This is used for syncing a locally # generated repo to the server that is it hosted on. It must end in the # standard public repo name of "/fdroid", but can be in up to three levels of # sub-directories (i.e. /var/www/packagerepos/fdroid). You can include # multiple servers to sync to by wrapping the whole thing in {} or [], and # including the serverwebroot strings in a comma-separated list. # # serverwebroot = 'user@example:/var/www/fdroid' # serverwebroot = { # 'foo.com:/usr/share/nginx/www/fdroid', # 'bar.info:/var/www/fdroid', # } # Any mirrors of this repo, for example all of the servers declared in # serverwebroot, will automatically be used by the client. If one # mirror is not working, then the client will try another. If the # client has Tor enabled, then the client will prefer mirrors with # .onion addresses. This base URL will be used for both the main repo # and the archive, if it is enabled. So these URLs should end in the # 'fdroid' base of the F-Droid part of the web server like serverwebroot. # # mirrors = { # 'https://foo.bar/fdroid', # 'http://foobarfoobarfoobar.onion/fdroid', # } # optionally specific which identity file to use when using rsync over SSH # # identity_file = '~/.ssh/fdroid_id_rsa' # If you are running the repo signing process on a completely offline machine, # which provides the best security, then you can specify a folder to sync the # repo to when running `fdroid server update`. This is most likely going to # be a USB thumb drive, SD Card, or some other kind of removable media. Make # sure it is mounted before running `fdroid server update`. Using the # standard folder called 'fdroid' as the specified folder is recommended, like # with serverwebroot. # # local_copy_dir = '/media/MyUSBThumbDrive/fdroid' # If you are using local_copy_dir on an offline build/signing server, once the # thumb drive has been plugged into the online machine, it will need to be # synced to the copy on the online machine. To make that happen # automatically, set sync_from_local_copy_dir to True: # # sync_from_local_copy_dir = True # To upload the repo to an Amazon S3 bucket using `fdroid server update`. # Warning, this deletes and recreates the whole fdroid/ directory each # time. This is based on apache-libcloud, which supports basically all cloud # storage services, so it should be easy to port the fdroid server tools to # any of them. # # awsbucket = 'myawsfdroid' # awsaccesskeyid = 'SEE0CHAITHEIMAUR2USA' # awssecretkey = 'yourverysecretkeywordpassphraserighthere' # If you want to force 'fdroid server' to use a non-standard serverwebroot # # nonstandardwebroot = False # The build logs can be posted to a mediawiki instance, like on f-droid.org. # wiki_protocol = "http" # wiki_server = "server" # wiki_path = "/wiki/" # wiki_user = "login" # wiki_password = "1234" # Only set this to true when running a repository where you want to generate # stats, and only then on the master build servers, not a development # machine. # update_stats = True # When used with stats, this is a list of IP addresses that are ignored for # calculation purposes. # stats_ignore = [] # Server stats logs are retrieved from. Required when update_stats is True. # stats_server = "example.com" # User stats logs are retrieved from. Required when update_stats is True. # stats_user = "bob" # Use the following to push stats to a Carbon instance: # stats_to_carbon = False # carbon_host = '0.0.0.0' # carbon_port = 2003 # Set this to true to always use a build server. This saves specifying the # --server option on dedicated secure build server hosts. # build_server_always = True # By default, fdroid will use YAML .yml and the custom .txt metadata formats. It # is also possible to have metadata in JSON and XML by adding 'json' and # 'xml'. # accepted_formats = ['txt', 'yml'] # Limit in number of characters that fields can take up # Only the fields listed here are supported, defaults shown # char_limits = { # 'Summary': 80, # 'Description': 4000, # }