Precompiled binaries for apkeep
on various platforms can be downloaded
here.
To install from crates.io
, simply install rust and
run
cargo install apkeep
Or to install from the latest commit in our repository, run
cargo install --git https://github.com/EFForg/apkeep.git
If using on an Android platform, termux
must be installed first.
Upgrade to the latest packages with pkg update
, then install the apkeep
precompiled binary
as described above or run pkg install apkeep
to install from the termux
repository.
Docker images are also available through the GitHub Container Registry. Aside from using a specific release version, the following floating tags are available:
- stable: tracks the latest stable release (recommended)
- latest: tracks the latest release, including pre-releases
- edge: tracks the latest commit
See USAGE
.
The simplest example is to download a single APK to the current directory:
apkeep -a com.instagram.android .
This downloads from the default source, APKPure, which does not require credentials. To download directly from the google play store, you will first have to obtain an AAS token. Then,
apkeep -a com.instagram.android -d google-play -e 'someone@gmail.com' -t aas_token .
For more google play usage examples, such as specifying a device configuration, timezone or
locale, refer to the USAGE-google-play.md
document.
To download from the F-Droid open source repository:
apkeep -a org.mozilla.fennec_fdroid -d f-droid .
For more F-Droid usage examples, such as downloading from F-Droid mirrors or other F-Droid
repositories, refer to the USAGE-fdroid.md
document.
Or, to download from the Huawei AppGallery:
apkeep -a com.elysiumlabs.newsbytes -d huawei-app-gallery .
To download a specific version of an APK (possible for APKPure or F-Droid), use the @version
convention:
apkeep -a com.instagram.android@1.2.3 .
Or, to list what versions are available, use -l
:
apkeep -l -a org.mozilla.fennec_fdroid -d f-droid
Refer to USAGE
to download multiple
APKs in a single run.
All the above examples can also be used in Docker with minimal changes. For example, to download a single APK to your chosen output directory:
docker run --rm -v output_path:/output ghcr.io/efforg/apkeep:stable -a com.instagram.android
/output
You can either specify a CSV file which lists the apps to download, or an individual app ID. If you specify a CSV file and the app ID is not specified by the first column, you'll have to use the --field option as well. If you have a simple file with one app ID per line, you can just treat it as a CSV with a single field.
You can use this tool to download from a few distinct sources.
- The Google Play Store (
-d google-play
), given an email address and AAS token - APKPure (
-d apk-pure
), a third-party site hosting APKs available on the Play Store - F-Droid (
-d f-droid
), a repository for free and open-source Android apps.apkeep
verifies that these APKs are signed by the F-Droid maintainers, and alerts the user if an APK was downloaded but could not be verified - The Huawei AppGallery (
-d huawei-app-gallery
), an app store popular in China
Users should not use app lists or choose so many parallel APK fetches as to place unreasonable or disproportionately large load on the infrastructure of the app distributor.
When using with the Google Play Store as the download source, a few considerations should be made:
- Google may terminate your Google account based on Terms of Service violations. Read their Terms of Service, avoid violating it, and choose an account where this outcome is acceptable.
- Paid and DRM apps will not be available.
- Using Tor will make it a lot more likely that the download will fail.
License: MIT