PDroid allows blocking access for any installed application to the following data separately:
- Device ID (IMEI/MEID/ESN)
- Subscriber ID (IMSI)
- SIM serial (ICCID)
- Phone and mailbox number
- Incoming call number
- Outgoing call number
- GPS location
- Network location
- List of accounts (including your google e-mail address)
- Account auth tokens
- Contacts
- Call logs
- Calendar
- SMS
- MMS
- Browser bookmarks and history
- System logs
- SIM info (operator, country)
- Network info (operator, country)
Why you would want to use it:
- Applicaitons do NOT crash when access to private data is blocked (unlike with Permissions Denied or CM)
- Fine-grained tuning of access to private data
- No background service needed
- Very small memory footprint (~700KB)
- No impact on battery life
- No impact on performance (5ms overhead on access to private data; yes, that's 0.005s)
- 100% reliable unlike ROOT applications (LBE), which need to start their background service on boot (see android underground to learn why this is an issue)
- No ROOT required for the app to run
- No Android permissions required for the app to run
- Open-source
Download:
Automatic PDroid Patcher for Windows (XP/Vista/7):
- JDK 6 or newer is required (get it here http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jdk-6u25-download-346242.html)
- Install JDK 6 into the default directory (don't change anything when installing)
- .NET Framework 2.0 or newer required (ships with Windows since XP SP2)
- Currently only supports Gingerbread (Android 2.3)
- Will only work with deodexed ROMs (take a look into your ROM's system/framework directory; if there are any *.odex files, your ROM is NOT deodexed)
- You will need to re-create your settings backup after updating from version 1.27 (it is not compatible with the newer version)
Download PDroid Patcher v1.32 Beta 0.321 for Windows
Patch Installation Requirements:
- ROOTED device
- For HTC devices: S-OFF ([TOOL] One click ENG S-OFF for HTC Desire HD)
- ClockworkMod Recovery 3.0.2.6 or newer
- If you "integrated sys Dalvik into ROM" with Titanium Backup, you will have to undo it
Installation Instructions:
- BACKUP YOUR ROM (HOWTO)
- Make a PDroid Patch for your ROM with the PDroid Patcher and put the patch on your SD card
- Boot your device into your custom (CWM) recovery (Desire HD: vol down + power)
- If you flashed the patch before but PDroid said it still was not installed, then select "mount /system"
- Select "install zip from sdcard"
- Select "choose zip from sdcard"
- Select the PDroid patch you have put on your SD card
- After flashing is finished, reboot the device
- Install the PDroid app from the Android Market
- Rate the app at the Android market (let me know, if you have any issues beforehand)
Patch Changelog:
1.32: Fixed updating from version 1.27 and below
1.31: Fixed patching incompatibility with some ROMs (like Zeus v5)
1.30:
- Fixed the alarm being put to snooze every time a call is received or made
- Fixed FC for some applications (like Yandex Maps)
- Fixed bootloops for AT&T and SonyEricsson devices (hopefully)
- Many small tweaks
1.26: Fixed an issue, which would make Google Listen and probably other apps crash
1.25:
- Fixed an issue, where PDroid would conflict with some ROOT applications making them freeze
- Fixed random geocoordinates generation
- Fixed other minor bugs
1.21: Fixed the bug where the device would sometimes boot loop right after the boot is finished
1.2: Added data access notification feature
1.1: Bugfixes
1.0: Initial release
Source:
- Download: PDroid 2.3.4 source (v1.27) (yes it is based on 2.3.4 but also works with 2.3.3 and 2.3.5 flawlessly)
- Get the 2.3.4 source from AOSP (branch: android-2.3.4_r1)
- Extract the patches from the above archive to the 2.3.4 tree root
- Run:
Code:
patch -p1 -i build.patch patch -p1 -i frameworks.patch patch -p1 -i libcore.patch
- Make a clean build
- Apply the patches (see above)
- Run:
Code:
source build/envsetup.sh make update-api mmm frameworks/base mmm frameworks/base/services/java mmm libcore make snod
FAQ:
Right hereI do not have Market access, where can I download the PDroid app?
Controlling access to the network/internet requires either patching the kernel or using ROOT access within the PDroid app. I try avoiding the former due to portability and the latter due to user privacy/security reasons. I am looking into adding internet access control in a way, which would be the most acceptable/convenient for the user. However, this feature currently isn't on the top of my to-do list.
For experienced developers the following basic steps for creating a PDroid patch should be enough to get you started:
- Make a clean AOSP build (2.3.4, assuming that your ROM is based on 2.3.x)
- Make another build with PDroid sources added
- Decompile the framework.jar, services.jar and core.jar files inside the system/framework directory (of both above builds) using apktool
- Diff the output so that you know, which parts were changed by PDroid
- Decompile the above three files from your ROM, you want to patch
- Add the missing code to your ROM files based on the above diff
- Recompile your patched ROM files using apktool
Yes. But I have not ported PDroid to Froyo or ICS yet. No ETAs yet. You'll need some patience there.
I might, when I get some more spare time
Yes, however you will need to backup your settings to internal memory (PDroid preferences) before making a backup with TitaniumBackup. After restoring with TitaniumBackup, you will need to restore the previously backed up settings. Alternatively you can backup privacy settings to the SD card.
Yes.
I have applied the correct patch but my device does not boot, how do I find out what the error is?
- Restore your backup
- Get the Android SDK
- Install it (you don't need the eclipse part)
- Enable USB-debugging on your device
- Connect it to your PC
- Start ddms, which is located in the android-sdk-[platform]\tools directory
- Apply PDroid patch
- Reboot the device
- When your device appears in the ddms window, click on it to see the system log
- Filter the log by "error"
- Watch the system log for errors and post them here
Have you flashed other mods to your ROM? If so, PDroid is most likely conflicting with them. You will need to create a patch for your customized ROM.I have flashed a patch but I am having very weird issues I didn't have before (like you cannot unlock the SIM card or there are weird graphics etc.)?
Also make sure that you are using a patch appropriate for your ROM (the CyanogenMod patches for stable 7.1 will mostly not work on nightlies unless the link says so).
If your other mods DO NOT replace any of the three files: framework.jar, services.jar or core.jar in /system/framework, you can just create a patch normally based on your original ROM file.How do I make a patch for my device after I have flashed some other mods?
Otherwise you will need to extract those three files from your device (use a root file manager or adb pull), put them into your ROM zip (also in /system/framework) and then create a PDroid patch based on the ROM zip.
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