This repository has been archived. We’ve rebuilt the foundations of the Proton Mail Android app and moved it to a new repository.
All future releases and source code updates will be available here: ProtonMail/android-mail
Thank you for your support and understanding.
Copyright (c) 2020 Proton AG
The code and data files in this distribution are licensed 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. See https://www.gnu.org/licenses/ for a copy of this license.
See LICENSE file
The most straightforward way to build and run this application is to:
- Install Android Studio: https://developer.android.com/studio/install
- Clone the repository. You have two options:
- Use the
Project from version control
in Android Studio, or - Use the
git clone
command and import it into Android Studio
- Use the
- Build and run the app directly in Android Studio
Alternatively, if you want to build the app directly from the command line (or using a different IDE, etc.), you will first need to install the command line tools from: https://developer.android.com/studio#cmdline-tools. Then you will need to install the SDK using the sdkmanager
tool. After cloning the repository with git clone
you will need to edit the local.properties
file so that it points to the location of the SDK. Depending on which operating systems you use, the location of the SDK is usually:
- Windows:
C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\Android\sdk
- MacOS:
/Users/<username>/Library/Android/Sdk/
- Linux:
/home/<username>/Android/Sdk/
Then, go to the app’s root directory in the command line tool and run:
./gradlew assembleBetaDebug
adb install ./app/build/outputs/apk/beta/debug/ProtonMail-Android-1.XX.X-beta-debug.apk
When building from source, in app push notifications for new emails will not work out of the box.
The app uses Google's Firebase Cloud Messaging (FCM) service to deliver push notifications. However, we are not publishing the production version of the configuration files needed to set up this service, because the values specified within are deemed sensitive.
Instead, we publish dummy versions of the files (config/google-services/dummy-google-services.json
and config/google-services/dummy-google-services-beta.json
) which allows you to build the app without push notifications. The dummy files will be copied to the relevant folders once you run the ./gradlew command.
We may offer alternative push notification systems in the future which do not rely on Google services.
Contributions are appreciated, but must conform to Proton Guidelines.
Branch names must respect the pattern type/description-of-the-change
.
Type must be one of the following:
chore
for changes not related to the Kotlin source code, for example a change in the build configdoc
for changes related to source code documentation, or external document, like the READMEfeat
for a new feature for the appfix
for bug fixesrefactor
for improving one or more unit of code, without impacting the behaviour of the apptest
for everything related to test ( add a new test suite, add a new test into an already existing test suite or improve/modify the performance or the behaviour of an already existing test )
description of change must be a concise and meaningful description of what is expected by the change apported; words must be separated by a dash -
The whole name of the branch must be lower case.
The template for a commit message is the following
<Title of the commit>
#comment <Description of the changes>
Affected: <List of affected classes or behaviours>
Title is required and must start with a capital letter.
#comment
field is optional if the Title can exhaustively explain the changes, otherwise is required. Body of the comment must start with a capital letter.
Affected
is optional and must be a comma separated list of the elements affected by the changes, it could be the name of a class or a behaviour like Encryption, Login flow, LoginActivity.kt
The code must conform the standards defined in the files config/CodeStyle.xml
and config/detekt.xml
.
CodeStyle.xml
can be imported in the IDE ( Preferences -> Editor -> Code Style -> Import scheme for IntelliJ and Android Studio ).
Detekt reports can be generated with the command ./gradlew detekt
. Check Detekt GitHub documentation for know how to download and configure the optional IDE plugin.
Copyright (c) 2020 Proton Technologies AG