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A container-based approach to boot a full Android system on regular GNU/Linux systems running Wayland based desktop environments.

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Vid_837.mp4

In the center of the frame stood a man in a yellow raincoat, his back to the camera. He was holding a red umbrella that looked far too bright against the gray world. The person filming slowed down, stopping just inches behind him.

When she clicked play, the screen stayed black for ten seconds. Then, the grainy footage of a rainy train station flickered to life. The camera was shaky, held by someone walking toward the edge of the platform. There was no music, only the rhythmic thump-thump of boots on wet concrete and the distant whistle of an approaching engine.

Unlike the others, it had no thumbnail. Just a generic gray icon. vid_837.mp4

Elara leaned in, her heart racing. The man in the raincoat began to turn. Just as his profile came into view—just as she thought she recognized the curve of his jaw—the video cut to a bright, sun-drenched meadow.

Was it a family memory, a travel clip, or something else entirely? In the center of the frame stood a

The audio shifted. Now, there was laughter. A child’s voice shouted, "You found it!" The camera panned down to a patch of dirt where a small, wooden box had been unearthed. The video ended there. Elara looked at the file size: .

She tried to play it again, but the computer threw an error: File not found. When she refreshed the folder, was gone, as if the drive had finally exhaled its last secret before giving up the ghost. She never found the wooden box, but every time it rained, she found herself looking for a yellow raincoat in the crowd. When she clicked play, the screen stayed black

Elara found the drive at the bottom of a cardboard box labeled College – 2012 . It was a silver brick of metal, scratched and heavy. When she plugged it in, the fan whirred like a dying engine. The folders were a mess of half-finished essays and blurry party photos, but one file stood out in the root directory: .

About Us

Get your favourite Android Apps on Linux.

Waydroid brings all the apps you love, right to your desktop, working side by side your Linux applications.
The Android inside the container has direct access to needed hardwares.
The Android runtime environment ships with a minimal customized Android system image based on LineageOS. The used image is currently based on Android 13

Install Instructions
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Docs

Our Documentation

Our documentation site can be found at docs.waydro.id

Bugs & Reports

Bug Reports can be filed on our repo Github Repo

Project Development

Our development repositories are hosted on Github

How to Install ?

Please refer to our installation docs for complete installation guide.

Manual Image Download

You can also manually download our images from

sourceforge logo SourceForge
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Instructions

Quick install reference

For systemd distributions

Waydroid supports most common architectures (ARM, ARM64, x86 & x86_64 CPUs)

Waydroid uses Android's mesa integration for passthrough, and that enables support to most ARM/ARM64 SOCs on the mobile side, and Intel/AMD GPUs for the PC side. For Nvidia GPUs (except tegra) and VMs, we recommend using software-rendering

Follow the install instructions for your linux distribution. You can find a list in our docs.

After installing you should start the waydroid-container service, if it was not started automatically:

sudo systemctl enable --now waydroid-container

Then launch Waydroid from the applications menu and follow the first-launch wizard.

If prompted, use the following links for System OTA and Vendor OTA:

https://ota.waydro.id/system

https://ota.waydro.id/vendor

For further instructions, please visit the docs site here

In the center of the frame stood a man in a yellow raincoat, his back to the camera. He was holding a red umbrella that looked far too bright against the gray world. The person filming slowed down, stopping just inches behind him.

When she clicked play, the screen stayed black for ten seconds. Then, the grainy footage of a rainy train station flickered to life. The camera was shaky, held by someone walking toward the edge of the platform. There was no music, only the rhythmic thump-thump of boots on wet concrete and the distant whistle of an approaching engine.

Unlike the others, it had no thumbnail. Just a generic gray icon.

Elara leaned in, her heart racing. The man in the raincoat began to turn. Just as his profile came into view—just as she thought she recognized the curve of his jaw—the video cut to a bright, sun-drenched meadow.

Was it a family memory, a travel clip, or something else entirely?

The audio shifted. Now, there was laughter. A child’s voice shouted, "You found it!" The camera panned down to a patch of dirt where a small, wooden box had been unearthed. The video ended there. Elara looked at the file size: .

She tried to play it again, but the computer threw an error: File not found. When she refreshed the folder, was gone, as if the drive had finally exhaled its last secret before giving up the ghost. She never found the wooden box, but every time it rained, she found herself looking for a yellow raincoat in the crowd.

Elara found the drive at the bottom of a cardboard box labeled College – 2012 . It was a silver brick of metal, scratched and heavy. When she plugged it in, the fan whirred like a dying engine. The folders were a mess of half-finished essays and blurry party photos, but one file stood out in the root directory: .

Our Team

Meet The Team

Here are the members of our team

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Erfan Abdi
@erfanoabdi
Lead Developer
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Alessandro Astone
@aleasto
Developer
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Jon West
@electrikjesus
Developer
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Radek Błędowski
@RKBDI
Designer