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<li class="active"><a href="/">GrapheneOS</a></li>
<li><a href="/install">Install</a></li>
<li><a href="/build">Build</a></li>
<li><a href="/usage">Usage</a></li>
<li><a href="/faq">FAQ</a></li>
<li><a href="/releases">Releases</a></li>
<li><a href="/source">Source</a></li>
<li><a href="/donate">Donate</a></li>
<li><a href="/contact">Contact</a></li>
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<h1 id="grapheneos">
<a href="#grapheneos">GrapheneOS</a>
</h1>
<p>GrapheneOS is an <a href="/source">open source</a> privacy and security focused
mobile OS with Android app compatibility. It's focused on the research and development
of privacy and security technology including substantial improvements to sandboxing,
exploit mitigations and the permission model. GrapheneOS also develops various apps
and services with a focus on privacy and security. Vanadium is a hardened variant of
the Chromium browser and WebView specifically built for GrapheneOS. GrapheneOS also
includes our minimal security-focused PDF Viewer, our hardware-based Auditor app / attestation
service providing local and remote verification of devices, and the externally
developed Seedvault encrypted backup which was initially developed for inclusion in
GrapheneOS.</p>
<p>GrapheneOS is a collaborative open source project, not a company. It's used and
supported by a variety of companies and other organizations. It won't be closely tied
to any company in particular. There will eventually be a non-profit GrapheneOS
foundation, but for now the developers represent the project.</p>
<p>GrapheneOS improves the privacy and security of the OS from the bottom up. It
has a hardened kernel, libc, malloc and compiler toolchain with many low-level
improvements. These changes are designed to eliminate whole classes of serious
vulnerabilities or provide meaningful barriers to exploitation. We avoid making
changes without a clear rationale and we regularly work towards simplifying and
replacing these low-level improvements. The malloc implementation is our own <a
href="https://github.com/GrapheneOS/hardened_malloc/blob/master/README.md">hardened_malloc</a>
providing cutting edge security for modern systems. The hardened_malloc project is
portable to other Linux-based operating systems and is being adopted by other
security-focused operating systems like Whonix. The <a
href="https://github.com/GrapheneOS/hardened_malloc/blob/master/README.md">hardened_malloc
README</a> has extensive documentation on it. Our work also heavily influenced the
design of the <a href="https://www.openwall.com/lists/musl/2020/05/13/1">next-generation
musl malloc implementation</a> which offers substantially better security than musl's
previous malloc while still having minimal memory usage and code size.</p>
<p>There are also many under-the-hood changes at a higher level, including major
improvements to SELinux policies particularly for the app sandbox. GrapheneOS tries to
avoid impacting the user experience with the privacy and security features. Ideally,
the features can be designed so that they're always enabled with no impact on the user
experience and no additional complexity like configuration options. It's not always
feasible, and GrapheneOS does add various toggles for features like the Network
permission, Sensors permission, restrictions when the device is locked (USB
peripherals, camera, quick tiles), etc. along with more complex user-facing privacy
and security features with their own UX.</p>
<p>GrapheneOS has made substantial contributions to the privacy and security of the
Android Open Source Project, along with contributions to the Linux kernel, LLVM,
OpenBSD and other projects. Much of our past work is no longer part of the downstream
GrapheneOS project because we've successfully landed many patches upstream. We've had
even more success with making suggestions and participating in design discussions to
steer things in the direction we want. Many upstream changes in AOSP such as removing
app access to low-level process, network, timing and profiling information originated
in the GrapheneOS project. The needs of the upstream projects are often different from
ours, so they'll often reimplement the features in a more flexible way. We've almost
always been able to move to using the upstream features and even when we still need
our own implementation it helps to have the concepts/restrictions considered by the
upstream project and apps needing to be compatible with it. Getting features upstream
often leads to an improved user experience and app compatibility.</p>
<p>Official releases are available on the <a href="/releases">releases page</a> and
installation instructions are on the <a href="/install">install page</a>.</p>
<p>The official GrapheneOS releases are supported by our
<a href="https://github.com/GrapheneOS/Auditor/releases">Auditor app</a> and
<a href="https://attestation.app/">attestation service</a>. The Auditor app and
attestation service provide strong hardware-based verification of the authenticity and
integrity of the firmware/software on the device. A strong pairing-based approach is
used which also provides verification of the device's identity based on the hardware
backed key generated for each pairing. Software-based checks are layered on top with
trust securely chained from the hardware. For more details, see the <a
href="https://attestation.app/about">about page</a> and <a
href="https://attestation.app/tutorial">tutorial</a>. These also support other
operating systems.</p>
<h2 id="never-google-services">
<a href="#never-google-services">No Google apps or services</a>
</h2>
<p>GrapheneOS will never include either Google Play services or another implementation
of Google services like microG. Those are not part of the Android Open Source Project
and are not required for baseline Android compatibility. Apps designed to run on
Android rather than only Android with bundled Google apps and services already work on
GrapheneOS, so a huge number of both open and closed source apps are already available
for it.</p>
<p>Open APIs not tied to Google will continue to be implemented using open source
providers like the Seedvault backup app. Text-to-speech, voice-to-text, non-GPS-based
location services, geocoding, accessibility services, etc. are examples of other open
Android APIs where we need to develop/bundle an implementation based on existing open
source projects. Compatibility with apps depending on Google APIs / services will be
improved by implementing them in a way that pretends Google has stopped existing and
the servers are unavailable.</p>
<h2 id="history">
<a href="#history">History</a>
</h2>
<p>GrapheneOS was founded by Daniel Micay in late 2014. It started as a solo project
incorporating his previous open source privacy/security work. The project initially
created a port of OpenBSD malloc to Android's Bionic libc and a port of the PaX kernel
patches to the kernels for the supported devices. It quickly expanded to having a
large set of homegrown privacy and security improvements, particularly low-level
hardening work on the compiler toolchain and Bionic. Work began on landing code
upstream in AOSP and other upstream projects. A substantial portion of these early
changes were either successfully landed upstream or heavily influenced the upstream
changes which replaced them. The project was able to move very quickly in these days
because there was so much low hanging fruit to address and it wasn't yet trying to
produce a highly robust, production quality OS.</p>
<p>In late 2015, a company was incorporated which became the primary sponsor of the
project. GrapheneOS was previously known as CopperheadOS while it was sponsored by
this company. The intention was to use the company to build a business around
GrapheneOS selling support, contract work and customized proprietary variants of the
OS. The company was supposed to serve the needs of the open source project, rather
than vice versa. It was explicitly agreed that GrapheneOS would remain independently
owned and controlled by Daniel Micay. This company failed to live up the promises and
is no longer associated in any way with GrapheneOS. The fact that the company was
accidentally founded as 'Coppperhead Limited' was just the beginning of a multi-year
trainwreck holding back and poisoning a successful open source project it ended up
leeching off rather than supporting.</p>
<p>In 2018, the company was hijacked by the CEO who attempted to take over the project
through coercion, but they were rebuked. They seized the infrastructure and stole the
donations, but the project successfully moved on without them and has been fully
revived. Since then, they've taken to fraudulently claiming ownership and authorship
of our work, which has no basis in fact. They've tried to retroactively change the
terms of their involvement and rewrite the history of the project. These claims are
easily falsified through the public record and by people involved with the open source
project and the former sponsor. This former sponsor has engaged in a campaign of
misinformation and harassment of contributors to the project. Be aware that they are
actively trying to sabotage GrapheneOS and are engaging in many forms of attacks
against the project, the developers, contributors and supporters. Meanwhile, they
continue profiting from our open source work which they falsely claim as their own
creation.</p>
<p>After splitting from the former sponsor, the project was rebranded to
AndroidHardening and then to GrapheneOS and it has continued down the original path of
being an independent open source project. It will never again be closely tied to any
particular sponsor or company.</p>
<h2 id="copyright-and-licensing">
<a href="#copyright-and-licensing">Copyright and licensing</a>
</h2>
<p>The copyright for GrapheneOS code is entirely owned by the GrapheneOS developers
and is made available under OSI-approved Open Source licenses. The upstream licensing
is inherited for the modifications to those projects and MIT licensing is used for our
own standalone projects. GrapheneOS has never had any copyright assignment and the
developers have always owned their own contributions.</p>
<p>The tiny portion of the code written by people under contract with the former
sponsor has not been included in the project since it was ported from Android Oreo to
Pie in 2018. This code became obsolete and was no longer useful. The vast majority of
the code from the previous era was owned by Daniel Micay, with very few exceptions. It
was never written under any contracts or employment agreements, was never assigned to
any company or organization and was the continuation of the original independent open
source project. The code was originally published under the same permissive open
source licenses that are used by GrapheneOS today. Only a small portion of this
historical code is actually still in use today. Most has become obsolete or has been
replaced by rewrites taking better approaches than in the past.</p>
<p>There was an era from September 2016 until the project split from the former
sponsor in 2018 where non-commercial usage licensing was used for revisions to the
existing permissively licensed code. This was an attempt to prop up the sponsor that
was supposed to be supporting the open source project. This did not impact ownership
of the code and Daniel Micay has relicensed the portions of the code that are used by
GrapheneOS. GrapheneOS does not contain any code based on code under non-commercial
usage licensing. Great care was taken to avoid pulling in anything that was not solely
owned by Daniel Micay, which was the case for nearly everything in the project.</p>
<h2 id="roadmap">
<a href="#roadmap">Roadmap</a>
</h2>
<p>Details on the roadmap of the project will be posted on the site in the near
future.</p>
<p>To get an idea of the near term roadmap, check out the
<a href="/contact#reporting-issues">issue trackers</a>. The vast majority of the
issues filed in the trackers are planned enhancements, with care taken to make sure
all of the issues open in the tracker are concrete and actionable.</p>
<p>In the long term, GrapheneOS aims to move beyond a hardened fork of the Android
Open Source Project. Achieving the goals requires moving away from relying the Linux
kernel as the core of the OS and foundation of the security model. It needs to move
towards a microkernel-based model with a Linux compatibility layer, with many stepping
stones leading towards that goal including adopting virtualization-based
isolation.</p>
<p>The initial phase for the long-term roadmap of moving away from the current
foundation will be to deploy and integrate a hypervisor like Xen to leverage it for
reinforcing existing security boundaries. Linux would be running inside the virtual
machines at this point, inside and outside of the sandboxes being reinforced. In the
longer term, Linux inside the sandboxes can be replaced with a compatibility layer
like gVisor, which would need to be ported to arm64 and given a new backend alongside
the existing KVM backend. Over the longer term, i.e. many years from now, Linux can
fade away completely and so can the usage of virtualization. The anticipation is that
many other projects are going to be interested in this kind of migration, so it's not
going to be solely a GrapheneOS project, as demonstrated by the current existence of
the gVisor project and various other projects working on virtualization deployments
for mobile. Having a hypervisor with verified boot still intact will also provide a
way to achieve some of the goals based on extensions to Trusted Execution Environment
(TEE) functionality even without having GrapheneOS hardware.</p>
<p>Hardware and firmware security are core parts of the project, but it's currently
limited to research and submitting suggestions and bug reports upstream. In the long
term, the project will need to move into the hardware space.</p>
<h2 id="device-support">
<a href="/faq#device-support">Device support</a>
</h2>
<p>See <a href="/faq#device-support">the FAQ section on device support</a>.</p>
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