If you're looking for Lantern installers, you can find all of them at the following links:
- Android
- Windows XP SP 3 and above
- OSX 10.8 and above
- Ubuntu 14.04 32 bit
- Ubuntu 14.04 64 bit
- Arch Linux
If you're looking for help, please visit below user forums:
| English | 中文 | فارسی | français
- Custom fork of Go is currently required. We'll eventually switch to Go 1.7 which supports what we need due to this.
- An OSX or Linux host. Building on Windows is only partially supported with the help of Cygwin.
- Git -
brew install git
,apt-get install git
, etc - GNU Make
- Nodejs & NPM
- GNU C Library (linux only) -
apt-get install libc6-dev-i386
, etc - Gulp -
npm i gulp-cli -g
To build and run Lantern desktop, just do:
git clone https://github.com/getlantern/lantern.git
cd lantern
make lantern
./lantern
During development, you'll likely want to do a clean build like this:
make clean-desktop lantern && ./lantern
Building the mobile library and app requires the following:
- Install Java JDK 7 or 8
- Install Go 1.6 or higher
- Install Android SDK Tools
- Install NDK
- Install Gradle
Make sure to set these environment variables before trying to build any Android components (replace the paths based on wherever you've installed the Android SDK and NDK).
export ANDROID_HOME=/opt/adt-bundle-mac-x86_64-20130917/sdk
export PATH=$ANDROID_HOME/tools:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools:$ANDROID_HOME/build-tools:$PATH
export NDK_HOME=/opt/android-ndk-r10e
export PATH=$NDK_HOME:$PATH
The core Lantern functionality can be packaged into a native Android library with:
make android-lib
The Java-based Android SDK allows easy embedding of Lantern functionality in 3rd party Android apps such as Manoto TV. The SDK can be built with:
make android-sdk
This simple Android application provides a way to test the Android SDK. It can be built with:
make android-testbed
To create a debug build of the full lantern mobile app:
make android-debug
To install on the default device:
make android-install
To create a release build, add the following to your
~/.gradle/gradle.properties
file:
KEYSTORE_PWD=$KEYSTORE_PASSWORD
KEYSTORE_FILE=keystore.release.jks
KEY_PWD=$KEY_PASSWORD
You can find the exact values to add to your gradle.properties here.
Then it can be built with:
SECRETS_DIR=$PATH_TO_TOO_MANY_SECRETS \
VERSION=2.0.0-beta1 make android-release
To get the build working for Android Studio, you'll want to add the following
dummy values to your ~/.gradle/gradle.properties
file:
lanternRevisionDate="April 26, 2016"
lanternVersion=2.2.1
If you use adb
to install and debug an app to your Android device during
development and then subsequently build a signed APK and try to install it on
that same device, you may receive an unhelpful error saying "App Not Installed".
This typically means that you tried to install the same app but signed with a
different key. The solution is to uninstall the app first, but you have to
uninstall it for all users. You can do this by selecting "Uninstall for all
users" from:
Settings -> Apps -> [Pick the App] -> Hamburger Menu (...) -> Uninstall for all users.
If you forget to do this and just uninstall normally, you'll still encounter the
error. To fix this, you'll have to run the app with adb
again and then
uninstall for all users.
In android, programmatic access to HTTP resources typically uses the
HttpURLConnection
class. You can tell it to use a proxy by setting some
system properties:
System.setProperty("http.proxyHost", host);
System.setProperty("http.proxyPort", port);
System.setProperty("https.proxyHost", host);
System.setProperty("https.proxyPort", port);
You can disable proxying by clearing those properties:
System.clearProperty("http.proxyHost");
System.clearProperty("http.proxyPort");
System.clearProperty("https.proxyHost");
System.clearProperty("https.proxyPort");
However, there is one big caveat - HttpURLConnection
uses keep-alives to
reuse existing TCP connections. These TCP connections will still be using the
old proxy settings. This has several implications:
Set the proxy settings as early in the application's lifecycle as possible,
ideally before any HttpURLConnection
s have been opened.
Don't expect the settings to take effect immediately if some
HttpURLConnection
s have already been opened.
Disable keep-alives if you need to, which you can do like this:
HttpURLConnection urlConnection = (HttpURLConnection) url.openConnection();
// Need to force closing so that old connections (with old proxy settings) don't get reused.
urlConnection.setRequestProperty("Connection", "close");
To run Lantern on a server, you simply need to set a flag to build it in headless mode and then tell it to run on any local address as opposed to binding to localhost (so that it's accessible from other machines). You can do this as follows:
HEADLESS=true make docker-linux
or, if you're already running on Linux justHEADLESS=true make linux
./lantern_linux_amd64 --addr 0.0.0.0:8787
or./lantern_linux_386 --addr 0.0.0.0:8787
make genassets
If the environment variable UPDATE_DIST=true
is set, make genassets
also
updates the resources in the dist folder.
An annotated tag can be added like this:
git tag -a v1.0.0 -m"Tagged 1.0.0"
git push --tags
Use make create-tag
as a shortcut for creating and uploading tags:
VERSION='2.0.0-beta5' make create-tag
If you want to both create a package and upload a tag, run the create-tag
task
right after the packages
task:
[...env variables...] make packages create-tag
The icons used for the system tray are stored in
src/github/getlantern/lantern/icons
. To apply changes to the icons, make
your updates in the icons folder and then run make update-icons
.
Continuous builds are run on Travis CI. These builds use the .travis.yml
configuration. The github.com/getlantern/cf unit tests require an envvars.bash
to be populated with credentials for cloudflare. The original envvars.bash
is
available
here.
An encrypted version is checked in as envvars.bash.enc
, which was encrypted
per the instructions here.
Please, go to README-dev for an in-depth explanation of the Lantern internals and cloud services.
Please visit README-release for details on building release versions of Lantern.
More info for dealing with translations is available in README-translations.
Lantern is a gost project that provides repeatable builds and consolidated pull requests for lantern.
Go code in Lantern must pass several tests:
You can find a generic git-hook
file, which can be used as a pre-push (or pre-commit) hook to automatically
ensure these tests are passed before committing any code. Only Go packages in
src/github.com/getlantern
will be tested, and only those that have changes in
them.
Install by copying it into the local .git/hooks/
directory, with the pre-push
file name if you want to run it before pushing. Alternatively, you can copy
pre-commit.hook
to pre-commit
to run it before each commit.
ln -s "$(pwd)/prehook.sh" .git/hooks/prehook.sh
ln -s "$(pwd)/pre-push" .git/hooks/pre-push
Important notice
If you must commit without running the hooks, you can run git with the
--no-verify
flag.