KindnessInfinity

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Changes in version 146:

  • update max supported version of Play services to 24.44
  • update max supported version of Play Store to 43.3

A full list of changes from the previous release (version 145) is available through the Git commit log between the releases (only changes to the gmscompat_config text file and config-holder/ directory are part of GmsCompatConfig).

This update is available to GrapheneOS users via our app repository and will also be bundled into the next OS release.

GmsCompatConfig is the text-based configuration for the GrapheneOS sandboxed Google Play compatibility layer. It provides a large portion of the compatibility shims and sets the maximum supported versions for Play services and the Play Store.

 

Tags:

  • 2024103100 (Pixel 6, Pixel 6 Pro, Pixel 6a, Pixel 7, Pixel 7 Pro, Pixel 7a, Pixel Tablet, Pixel Fold, Pixel 8, Pixel 8 Pro, Pixel 8a, Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, Pixel 9 Pro XL, Pixel 9 Pro Fold, emulator, generic, other targets)

Changes since the 2024102400 release:

  • improve our existing fix for an upstream Android bug impacting apps using the telephony service in secondary users to fix support for disabling re-routing of Google Play location requests to the OS for fresh installs of sandboxed Google Play since the release of Android 15
  • Sandboxed Google Play compatibility layer: extend wired Android Auto toggle to additional methods used in edge cases
  • fix changing USB-C port control setting to a lower security level not fully applying until after locking and unlocking
  • Settings: fix per-app exploit protection toggles for Private Space
  • Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, Pixel 9 Pro XL, Pixel 9 Pro Fold: disable Wi-Fi HAL debug logging to avoid memory corruption caught by hardware memory tagging on GrapheneOS
  • raise system log buffer size from 256KiB to 512KiB to make logs obtained by users reporting issues more useful
  • enable stamp configuration for microdroid kernel builds to set LOCALVERSION based on version control information as expected
  • kernel (6.6): disable unused hibernation support
  • kernel (6.6): disable unused TIOCSTI ioctl (already blocked via standard Android SELinux ioctl filtering)
  • kernel (6.6): disable unused cachestat system call (already blocked for apps via standard Android seccomp-bpf policy)
  • kernel (6.6): enable random kmalloc caches for x86_64 and microdroid too, not only bare metal arm64
  • kernel (6.6): enable full struct randomization for x86_64 and microdroid too, not only bare metal arm64
  • kernel (6.6): enable DEBUG_SG for microdroid too, not only bare metal
  • kernel (6.6): enable FORTIFY_SOURCE for microdroid too, not only bare metal
  • kernel (6.6): disable BINFMT_MISC for microdroid too, not only bare metal
  • kernel (6.6): disable RSEQ for microdroid too, not only bare metal
  • kernel (6.6): add SYSRQ restrictions for microdroid too, not only bare metal
  • kernel (6.6): use the same KFENCE configuration for microdroid as bare metal
  • mark Sensors permission as implicitly added
  • avoid adding Sensors permission to hasCode=false packages
  • improve our implementation of extending verified boot to out-of-band shared library APK updates
  • Log Viewer: add userType line to header in non-Owner users
  • Log Viewer: add targetSdk and sharedUid to package info header
  • System Updater: update minimum and target API level to 35 (Android 15)
  • adevtool: update carrier settings
  • Vanadium: update to version 130.0.6723.86.0
  • Info: update to version 5
  • Auditor: update to version 87
  • Sandboxed Google Play compatibility layer: fix development support in OS debug builds
 

Changes in version 130.0.6723.86.0:

  • update to Chromium 130.0.6723.86

A full list of changes from the previous release (version 130.0.6723.73.0) is available through the Git commit log between the releases.

This update is available to GrapheneOS users via our app repository and will also be bundled into the next OS release. Vanadium isn't yet officially available for users outside GrapheneOS, although we plan to do that eventually. It won't be able to provide the WebView outside GrapheneOS and will have missing hardening and other features.

 

Notable changes in version 87:

  • update Android SDK to 35 (Android 15)
  • update target SDK to 35 (Android 15)
  • use new attestation.app API with /auditor/ prefix and JSON response for verify API
  • remove subscribe key for attestation.app account after successful verification
  • update Gradle to 8.10.2
  • update Android Gradle plugin to 8.7.1
  • update Kotlin to 2.0.21
  • update Android NDK to 27.2.12479018
  • minor performance and robustness improvements

A full list of changes from the previous release (version 86) is available through the Git commit log between the releases.

The Auditor app uses hardware security features on supported devices to validate the integrity of the operating system from another Android device. It will verify that the device is running the stock operating system with the bootloader locked and that no tampering with the operating system has occurred. It will also detect downgrades to a previous version.

It cannot be bypassed by modifying or tampering with the operating system (OS) because it receives signed device information from the device's Trusted Execution Environment (TEE) or Hardware Security Module (HSM) including the verified boot state, operating system variant and operating system version. The verification is much more meaningful after the initial pairing as the app primarily relies on Trust On First Use via pinning. It also verifies the identity of the device after the initial verification. Trust is chained through the verified OS to the app to bootstrap software checks with results displayed in a separate section.

This app is available through the Play Store with the app.attestation.auditor.play app id. Play Store releases go through review and it usually takes around 1 to 3 days before the Play Store pushes out the update to users. Play Store releases use Play Signing, so we use a separate app id from the releases we publish ourselves to avoid conflicts and to distinguish between them. Each release is initially pushed out through the Beta channel followed by the Stable channel.

Releases of the app signed by GrapheneOS with the app.attestation.auditor app id are published in the GrapheneOS App Store which provides fully automatic updates. Each release is initially pushed out through the Alpha channel, followed by the Beta channel and then finally the Stable channel. These releases are also bundled as part of GrapheneOS and published on GitHub.

GrapheneOS users must obtain GrapheneOS app updates through our App Store since verified boot metadata is required for out-of-band system app updates on GrapheneOS as part of extending verified boot to them.

 

Notable changes in version 5:

  • improve appearance of cards
  • mark headings semantically for accessibility
  • show error message when lacking a browser to handle opening links
  • add info button with link to about the releases to Release Notes top bar
  • implement adaptive navigation for improved support across window sizes and better animations
  • add full support for edge-to-edge
  • update Android SDK to 35 (Android 15)
  • update target SDK to 35 (Android 15)
  • update Gradle to 8.10.2
  • update Android Gradle plugin to 8.7.1
  • update Android NDK to 27.2.12479018
  • update Kotlin to 2.0.21
  • update AndroidX Compose BOM libraries to 2024.10.00
  • update AndroidX Navigation Compose library to 2.8.3
  • update AndroidX Activity Compose library to 1.9.3
  • update AndroidX Lifecycle libraries to 2.8.6

A full list of changes from the previous release (version 4) is available through the Git commit log between the releases.

Releases of the app are published in the GrapheneOS App Store. These releases are also bundled as part of GrapheneOS. You can use the GrapheneOS App Store on Android 12 or later for automatic updates. Each release is initially pushed out through the Alpha channel, followed by the Beta channel and then finally the Stable channel.

19
submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Notice which will not impact most users: apps which were only installed in secondary users but not Owner before updating to Android 15 and which were then installed in Owner after updating to Android 15 will have a one-time revocation of their Network/Sensors permissions after updating to this release as a minor consequence of migrating them from Android 14 again.

Tags:

  • 2024102400 (Pixel 6, Pixel 6 Pro, Pixel 6a, Pixel 7, Pixel 7 Pro, Pixel 7a, Pixel Tablet, Pixel Fold, Pixel 8, Pixel 8 Pro, Pixel 8a, Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, Pixel 9 Pro XL, Pixel 9 Pro Fold, emulator, generic, other targets)

Changes since the 2024102100 release:

  • switch back our original stricter approach to DNS leak blocking from our 2024050900 release with an additional fix for an Android DNS routing bug causing requests to the VPN DNS servers to be routed incorrectly, which should avoid the compatibility issues experienced with certain VPN apps when we tried to ship it before
  • avoid resetting Network or Sensors back to the global default after app updates in a specific case when migrating the state from Android 14 or earlier
  • add an extra one-time migration of Network and Sensors being disabled in Android 14 to Android 15 to work around an issue with the previous migration of the permission state which occurred for some users with some of their apps
  • fix ancient Android bug causing widgets to disappear from the user's home screen when the user stops, which was a major usability issue for secondary users
  • Keyboard: extend fix for upstream layout bug in landscape mode to fully fix it for 3-button navigation in addition to the default gesture navigation
  • Gallery: fix upstream cropping activity bug when both the input and output URI is the same to fix setting profile pictures for user profiles
  • raise backup service transport (Seedvault) timeout from 10 minutes / 5 minutes to 60 minutes / 30 minutes to handle very large backups, particularly for the device-to-device mode which includes nearly all app data
  • temporarily revert enforcing minimum 64kiB stack guard size for arm64 since Facebook recently included a buggy stack overflow check for the React Native Hermes runtime that's incompatible with larger gap sizes and beginning to be shipped by apps (revert was not applied for Android 15 port)
  • Sandboxed Google Play compatibility layer: add stubs for update_engine wrapper API to avoid potential Play services crashes if the existing approaches to disable the update service fail
  • Pixel 8, Pixel 8 Pro, Pixel 8a: disable Wi-Fi HAL debug logging to avoid memory corruption caught by hardware memory tagging on GrapheneOS
  • kernel (6.1): update to latest GKI LTS branch revision
  • use hardened GrapheneOS 6.6 LTS kernel for microdroid virtual machines for both arm64 and x86_64
  • Vanadium: update to version 130.0.6723.73.0
  • GmsCompatConfig: update to version 144
  • GmsCompatConfig: update to version 145
 

We're working on fixing a regression in the GrapheneOS releases based on Android 15 which resulted in a subset of users having a subset of their Network and Sensors toggle settings not migrated over from the Android 14 permission database to the Android 15 permission database.

The Network and Sensors toggles added by GrapheneOS still work fine on Android 15. Android 15 changed how permissions are stored and the way we're migrating settings from Android 14 is the problem. In a specific case, the values are being reset back to the current global default.

Android 15 includes a huge amount of important privacy and security fixes itself along with being required for the Pixel firmware/driver patches for October. Their release was on October 15th, our first public release was October 16th and we had 8 public releases before Stable.

For each of our 7 public releases based on Android 15 after our first one, we fixed every major reported issue not present on the stock Pixel OS and some of the issues impacting the stock OS too. Not much else we can do. We need more testers to catch subtle issues like this.

Our next release will also fix 2 more minor upstream bugs impacting AOSP apps and an upstream issue impacting every Android-based OS with secondary users causing widgets to be lost repeatedly. A compatibility workaround has also been added back for apps catching stack overflows.

We'll also be upgrading our current DNS leak blocking to the stricter version we shipped in May 2024 shortly after the Android DNS leaks were discovered by our community. We had to roll that back because of another Android bug which we've now finally figured out how to resolve.

Our initial strict Android DNS leak blocking in May 2024 was correct. Certain apps like ProtonVPN try to send their VPN DNS queries without an explicit network ID and relying on Android guessing they want the VPN tunnel which it handles incorrectly and broke with leak blocking.

 

Changes in version 145:

  • update max supported version of Play services to 24.42

A full list of changes from the previous release (version 144) is available through the Git commit log between the releases (only changes to the gmscompat_config text file and config-holder/ directory are part of GmsCompatConfig).

This update is available to GrapheneOS users via our app repository and will also be bundled into the next OS release.

GmsCompatConfig is the text-based configuration for the GrapheneOS sandboxed Google Play compatibility layer. It provides a large portion of the compatibility shims and sets the maximum supported versions for Play services and the Play Store.

 

Changes in version 130.0.6723.73.0:

  • update to Chromium 130.0.6723.73

A full list of changes from the previous release (version 130.0.6723.58.0) is available through the Git commit log between the releases.

This update is available to GrapheneOS users via our app repository and will also be bundled into the next OS release. Vanadium isn't yet officially available for users outside GrapheneOS, although we plan to do that eventually. It won't be able to provide the WebView outside GrapheneOS and will have missing hardening and other features.

 

We've finally fixed the ancient Android bug causing widgets/shortcuts to disappear in secondary users when switching away from them. It will be included in our next release. This issue impacts every Android-based OS with secondary user support and was a major usability issue.

We've also fixed 2 more Android 15 regressions in AOSP. AOSP Gallery had a long time bug in the cropping activity which started breaking setting profile pictures for users in Android 15. We also extended our AOSP keyboard landscape layout fix for the legacy 3 button navigation.

 

GrapheneOS fully supports the Private Space feature in Android 15, which is essentially a separate user nested inside of the Owner user.

We strongly recommend it as a replacement for a work profile managed by a local profile admin app. It has better OS integration and isolation.

Private Space is an isolated workspace (profile) for apps and data similar to both user profiles and work profiles. All 3 forms of profiles also have entirely separate VPN configuration which is very useful even if you connected to the same VPN, since exit IPs can be separate.

All forms of profiles have separate encryption keys. You can keep a Private Space at rest while the Owner user is logged in just as you can with a secondary user.

Private Space makes it easier to share data than users. The clipboard is shared, but we could add a setting for it.

GrapheneOS users choose to use the OS in different ways. A lot of people largely use open source apps and not sandboxed Google Play. Others use sandboxed Google Play in their main profile. Many use sandboxed Google Play in a dedicated profile to choose which apps use it.

Regardless of how people choose to use sandboxed Google Play, they're regular sandboxed apps without special access. Private Space makes it easier to use a dedicated profile for sandboxed Google Play though.

It's also worth noting you can still use a work profile alongside it.

All of our features including Contact Scopes, Storage Scopes and sandboxed Google Play have full support for Private Space. We added support for it significantly before the release of Android 15, even before the initial early release of the source code was published in September.

 

Changes in version 144:

  • update max supported version of Play Store to 43.2

A full list of changes from the previous release (version 143) is available through the Git commit log between the releases (only changes to the gmscompat_config text file and config-holder/ directory are part of GmsCompatConfig).

This update is available to GrapheneOS users via our app repository and will also be bundled into the next OS release.

GmsCompatConfig is the text-based configuration for the GrapheneOS sandboxed Google Play compatibility layer. It provides a large portion of the compatibility shims and sets the maximum supported versions for Play services and the Play Store.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

Oh i understand. My apologies

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 months ago (2 children)

KeepassDX is a password manager, which should be similar to authy. You can read about keepassDX here https://github.com/Kunzisoft/KeePassDX allows easy management of TOTP in KeePassDX

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

Pixel 6 becomes End Of Life on October 2026. Google determines it, you may read more about this here: https://support.google.com/pixelphone/answer/4457705?hl=en

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago (4 children)

Does this still happen on 2024080500 of GOS for you?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (4 children)

For me personally, I use keepassDX which supports TOTP

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

Oh that's really cool!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

GrapheneOS includes our own modern camera app focused on privacy and security. It includes modes for capturing images, videos and QR / barcode scanning along with additional modes based on CameraX vendor extensions (Portrait, HDR, Night, Face Retouch and Auto) on devices where they're available (Pixels currently only have support for Night mode).

Source: https://grapheneos.org/usage#grapheneos-camera-app

This forum thread also has further discussions on this: https://discuss.grapheneos.org/d/1889-grapheneos-camera-portrait-night-shot-etc

Hope this helps answer your question.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 months ago

Accrescent has a list of apps that can be easily installed, unlike Obtainium, Accrescent doesn't require the user to spend a lot of time adding each app they want to auto update/install to Accrescent as the apps are aleeady there. Similar to playstore.

Obtainiums only advantage to me is that you can add almost any app source, while Accrescent still is in development and as such lacks lots of apps at the moment.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 months ago

They are paid to research and report on a topic after all, so it would make sense for them to double check that everything is up to date.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 months ago

Yeah, significantly more secure, while also being way more modern.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 months ago

Oh sweet! Hope you like the OS! Please reach out if you need any help!

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