AIRA is peer-to-peer encrypted communication tool for local networks built on the PSEC protocol. It allows to securely send text messages and files without any server or Internet access. AIRA automatically discovers and connects to other peers on your network, so you don't need any prior configuration to start communicating.
Here is the Android version. You can find the original AIRA desktop version here.
AIRA is still under developement and is not ready for production usage yet. Not all features have been implemented and bugs are expected. Neither the code or the PSEC protocol received any security audit and therefore shouldn't be considered fully secure. AIRA is provided "as is", without any warranty of any kind.
- End-to-End encryption using the PSEC protocol
- Automatic peer discovery using mDNS
- Manual peer connection
- File transferts
- Notifications
- Encrypted database
- Contact verification
- IPv4/v6 compatibility
- Free/Libre and Open Source
AIRA releases are availables in the "Release" section. All APKs are signed with my PGP key available on keyservers. To download it:
gpg --keyserver hkps://keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys AFE384344A45E13A
Fingerprint: B64E FE86 CEE1 D054 F082 1711 AFE3 8434 4A45 E13A
Email: Hardcore Sushi <[email protected]>
Then, verify APK: gpg --verify AIRA.apk.asc AIRA.apk
Don't install the APK if the verification fails!
AIRA android uses some code from the desktop version which is written in Rust. Therefore, you need to compile this Rust code first.
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.3 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
rustup target add aarch64-linux-android armv7-linux-androideabi x86_64-linux-android i686-linux-android
We also need the Android NDK to cross-compile the rust code to Android. Currently, only versions up to r22b are supported. You can find instructions to install the NDK here: https://developer.android.com/ndk/guides
Once installed, you need to define the $ANDROID_NDK_HOME
environment variable (if not already set):
export ANDROID_NDK_HOME=/home/<user>/Android/SDK/ndk/<NDK version>"
git clone --depth=1 https://forge.chapril.org/hardcoresushi/AIRA-android.git && cd AIRA-android
git verify-commit HEAD
cd app/src/main/native
./build.sh
If you have AndroidStudio installed, you can just open the project directory and then start the build process. Otherwise, you can use Gradle from the command line:
Generate a signed APK with your keystore:
# From the project root directory:
./gradlew assembleRelease -Pandroid.injected.signing.store.file=<KEYFILE> -Pandroid.injected.signing.store.password=<STORE_PASSWORD> -Pandroid.injected.signing.key.alias=<KEY_ALIAS> -Pandroid.injected.signing.key.password=<KEY_PASSWORD>
Generate an unsigned APK:
./gradlew assembleRelease
Once completed, the APKs will be located under app/build/outputs/apk/release/
.
If you generate an unsigned APK you won't be able to install it as-is on your device. You will need to force install it with ADB:
adb install app-release-unsigned.apk