OONI Probe is free and open source software designed to measure internet censorship and other forms of network interference.
Other supported platforms: iOS, Desktop, CLI
This application requires Android Studio. We use Gradle and, as part of the initial gradle sync, Android studio will download all the required dependencies.
The most important dependency is oonimkall
. This dependency contains
the network measurement engine. Its sources are at
ooni/probe-cli.
When using Gradle from the command line, you will need to set the
ANDROID_SDK_ROOT
environment variable to point to the directory in
which you have installed the Android SDK.
We use the classic debug
and release
build types. We also
implement the following flavours:
-
stable
,dev
, andexperimental
(dimension:testing
); -
full
andfdroid
(dimension:license
).
The testing
dimension controls whether we're building a release
or a more unstable version. We build releases using the stable
flavour. The dev
flavour builds the version of the app that should
be released on the store as the beta channel. The experimental
flavour, instead, allows a developer to build a one-off version of
the app that uses a custom build of the oonimkall
library.
For stable
and dev
, we fetch oonimkall
from the
Maven central
repository. The experimental
flavour, instead, requires you to
put the oonimkall.aar
you built inside engine-experimental
.
The license
dimension controls which proprietary libraries to include
into the build. The full
flavour includes all such dependencies,
while the fdroid
flavour does not include any of them.
The variant names are therefore:
experimentalFullDebug
experimentalFullRelease
devFullDebug
devFullRelease
stableFullDebug
stableFullRelease
We additionally have stableFdroidDebug
and stableFdroidRelease
.
All of this is controlled by app/build.gradle.
- app contains the mobile app;
- engine contains wrappers for
oonimkall
, the measurement engine library; - engine-experimental allows us
to implement the
experimental
build flavour where you put theoonimkall.aar
file you built insideengine-experimental
rather than downloading it from Maven Central.
Ensure you have Android Studio and Android SDK installed. Build the devFullRelease
variant using Android Studio or this command line:
./gradlew assembleDevFullRelease
Instead to build the app to stay compliant to F-Droid use fdroid
, which
contains small tweaks required to have the app accepted by f-droid.
./gradlew assembleFdroid
Run unit tests
./gradlew testStableFullDebug
Run instrumented tests
Note: To also run the automation tests (to generate screenshots), set the Build Config flag
RUN_AUTOMATION
as true.
./gradlew connectedStableFullDebugAndroidTest
Generate code coverage report (after all unit and instrumented tests successfully passed)
./gradlew jacocoAndroidTestReport
To manage translations check out our translation repo and follow the instructions there.
-
Write some code
-
Open a pull request
-
Have fun!