| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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Use the more explicit name and shorter description following the
changes in 5a54bf9 and 90d672c.
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This is a ridiculous workaround to make the configuration (and other files) accessible to the user
necessary after the new storage access restriction enforced in Android 11 which prevent other
applications from accessing the supposedly public application's directory.
The app's internal private storage directory is now exposed to the user through an embedded FTP
server that the user can turn on and off from the configuration activity. The user can then play
with the configuration and retrieve logs through a remote or local FTP client application of their
choice.
GitHub: closes #103
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app storage
The external app public storage directory is no longer reliably accessible on Android 11 and above.
This makes editing the configuration and accessing the log files impossible in some cases.
Let's move to the app private storage, to be made accessible to the user by some other mean.
This has the benefit of also protecting the private keys that need to be stored encrypted otherwise.
We also split the configuration and cache directory into specialised sub-directories.
GitHub: related to #103
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Those can only be present in the default file.
sed -i '/translatable/d' values-zh-*/strings.xml
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