This is the snap for Signal Desktop. It is a community-maintained package to easily install Signal Desktop on Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian and other major Linux distributions. It is available in the Snap Store, Ubuntu Software, and a number of other applications.
"Signal Desktop is a private messaging app for your desktop"
snap install signal-desktop
Published for with 💝 by Snapcrafters
option | default | description |
---|---|---|
tray-icon | false | Whether or not to use the system tray (minimize to tray) support. This is disabled by default per the request of the Signal developers, because system tray support is not stable. Set to false , Signal will stop when you close it and will not have a system tray icon. Set to true , Signal will minimize to tray when you close it, and will have a system tray icon on supported desktops. |
You can change Snap configuration by running snap set signal-desktop <key>=<value>
. For example, snap set signal-desktop tray-icon=true
.
Thanks for your interest! Below you find instructions to help you contribute to this snap.
The general workflow is to submit pull requests that merges your changes into the candidate
branch here on GitHub. Once the pull request has been merged, a GitHub action will automatically build the snap and publish it to the candidate
channel in the Snap Store. Once the snap has been tested thoroughly, we promote it to the stable
channel so all our users get it!
If this is your first time contributing to this snap, you first need to set up your own fork of this repository.
-
Fork the repository into your own GitHub namespace.
-
Clone your fork, so that you have it on your local computer.
-
Configure your local repo. To make things a bit more intuitive, we will rename your fork's remote to
myfork
, and add the snapcrafters repo assnapcrafters
.git remote rename origin myfork git remote add snapcrafters https://github.com/snapcrafters/signal-desktop.git git fetch --all
Once you're all setup for contributing, keep in mind that you want the git information to be all up-to-date. So if you haven't "fetched" all changes in a while, start with that:
git fetch --all -p
Now that your git metadata has been updated you are ready to create a bugfix branch, make your changes, and open a pull request.
-
All pull requests should go to the stable branch so create your branch as a copy of the stable branch:
git checkout -b my-bugfix-branch snapcrafters/candidate
-
Make your desired changes and build a snap locally for testing:
snapcraft --use-lxd
-
After you are happy with your changes, commit them and push them to your fork so they are available on GitHub:
git commit -a git push -u myfork my-bugfix-branch
-
Then, open up a pull request from your
my-bugfix-branch
to thesnapcrafters/candidate
branch. -
Once you've opened the pull request, it will automatically trigger the build-test action that will launch a build of the snap. You can watch the progress of the snap build from your pull request (Show all checks -> Details). Once the snap build has completed, you can find the built snap (to test with) under "Artifacts".
-
Someone from the team will review the open pull request and either merge it or start a discussion with you with additional changes or clarification needed.
-
Once the pull request has been merged into the stable branch, a GitHub action will rebuild the snap using your changes and publish it to the Snap Store into the
candidate
channel. After sufficient testing of the snap from the candidate channel, one of the maintainers or administrators will promote the snap to the stable branch in the Snap Store.
- The license of both the build files in this repository and Signal Desktop itself is GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 only