The creator of DroidFS works as a freelance developer and privacy consultant. I am currently looking for new clients! If you are interested, take a look at the [website](https://arkensys.fr.to). Alternatively, you can directly support DroidFS by making a [donation](https://forge.chapril.org/hardcoresushi/DroidFS/src/branch/master/DONATE.txt).
Some available features are considered risky and are therefore disabled by default. It is strongly recommended that you read the following documentation if you wish to activate one of these options.
Disable the secure flag of DroidFS activities. This will allow you to take screenshots from the app, but will also allow other apps to record the screen while using DroidFS.
Decrypt and share file with other apps. These apps could save and send the files thus shared.
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<li><h4>Keep volume open when the app goes in background:</h4>
Don't close the volume when you leave the app but keep running it in the background. Anyone going back to the activity could have access to the volume.
Generate an AES-256 GCM key in the Android Keystore (protected by fingerprint authentication), then use it to encrypt the volume password hash and store it to the DroidFS internal storage. This require Android v6.0+. If your device is not encrypted, extracting the encryption key with physical access may be possible.
* Features requiring temporary writing of the plain file to disk (DroidFS internal storage). This file could be read by apps with root access or by physical access if your device is not encrypted.
DroidFS works as a wrapper around modified versions of the original encrypted container implementations ([libgocryptfs](https://forge.chapril.org/hardcoresushi/libgocryptfs) and [libcryfs](https://forge.chapril.org/hardcoresushi/libcryfs)). These programs were designed to run on standard x86 Linux systems: they access the underlying file system with file paths and syscalls. However, on Android, you can't access files from other applications using file paths. Instead, one has to use the [ContentProvider](https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/providers/content-providers) API. Obviously, neither Gocryptfs nor CryFS support this API. As a result, DroidFS cannot open volumes provided by other applications (such as cloud storage clients), nor can it allow other applications to access encrypted volumes once opened.
Due to Android's storage restrictions, encrypted volumes located on SD cards must be placed under `/Android/data/sushi.hardcore.droidfs/` if you want DroidFS to be able to modify them.
- [libpdfviewer](https://forge.chapril.org/hardcoresushi/libpdfviewer) (forked from [PdfViewer](https://github.com/GrapheneOS/PdfViewer)) to open PDF files