Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
81 lines (51 loc) · 2.48 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

81 lines (51 loc) · 2.48 KB

Proton VPN GTK app

Copyright (c) 2023 Proton AG

This repository holds the Proton VPN GTK app. For licensing information see COPYING and LICENSE. For contribution policy see CONTRIBUTING.

Description

The Proton VPN GTK app is intended for every Proton VPN service user, it provides full access to all functionalities available to authenticated users, with the user signup process handled on the website.

Installation

You can get the latest stable release from our Proton VPN official website.

Dependencies

For development purposes (within a virtual environment) see the required packages in the setup.py file, under install_requires and extra_require. As of now these packages will not be available on pypi. Also see Virtual environment below.

Virtual environment

If you didn't do it yet, to be able to pip install Proton VPN components you'll need to set up our internal Python package registry. You can do so running the command below, after replacing {GITLAB_TOKEN} with your personal access token with the scope set to api.

pip config set global.index-url https://__token__:{GITLAB_TOKEN}@{GITLAB_INSTANCE}/api/v4/groups/{GROUP_ID}/-/packages/pypi/simple

You can create the virtual environment and install the rest of dependencies as follows:

python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt

GUI application

App logs are stored under ~/.cache/Proton/VPN/logs/ directory.

User settings are under ~/.config/Proton/VPN/ directory.

Folder structure

Folder "debian"

Contains all debian related data, for easy package compilation.

Folder "rpmbuild"

Contains all rpm/fedora related data, for easy package compilation.

Folder "proton/app/gtk"

This folder contains the gtk app source code.

Folder "tests"

This folder contains unit/integrations test code.

You can run the integration tests with:

behave tests/integration/features

On headless systems, it's possible to run the integration tests using Xvfb (virtual framebuffer X server). On Debian-based distributions, you just have to install the xvfb package. After that, you can run the integration tests with:

xvfb-run -a behave integration_tests/features

Versioning

Version matches format: [major][minor][patch]