PostmarketOS is a free and open source, Linux-based operating system designed for smartphones. Originally developed as a project to extend the lifespan of old phones by letting you replace Android with Linux, the operating system also runs on new phones designed for Linux including the PinePhone and Librem 5.
But while there are plenty of desktop apps designed for GNU/Linux, the selection of mobile apps is a lot smaller.
Enter… Android apps.
The developers of postmarketOS have been working to let users run Android apps by using Anbox, an “Android in a Box” solution that basically installs Android in a container in a way that lets you run Android apps as if they were native apps.
Now it looks like they’ve met their goal — TuxPhones reports that the “Anbox support” ticket in the project’s issue tracker has been marked as closed, with the last update coming two weeks ago explaining that “Anbox is merged into both Alpine and pmaports,” so it’s time to mark the issue as closed — with any upcoming improvements or bug fixes to count as new issues.
While Anbox makes it possible to run Android apps on a Linux phone, there are some limitations:
- Anbox is based on Android 7.1.1 Nougat, so it may not support some apps that require more recent versions of Google’s operating system.
- It doesn’t include Google Play support, so you may need to work a little harder to find apps that can be installed via adb commands, and apps that require Google Play Services may require workarounds to run properly.
- Some apps and games may not work if they require other technologies that aren’t available via Anbox (such as OpenGLS ES 3.x).
- Expect some serious lag.
You may be able to circumvent some of those issues by sideloading Google Play Services and the Play Store, but I’m not sure if that’s been tested on phones running postmarketOS yet.
But if you want to see what things look like so far, Nikhil Jha did recently post a short video of a PinePhone running Android… inside of postmarketOS. Spoiler alert: it works, but it’s slow.
Running #Android apps in @postmarketOS on @thepine64 #PinePhone. This was already working but I haven’t seen a video of it so… here you go 🙂 pic.twitter.com/5ztatzKpdz
— Nikhil Jha (@jhanikhil) March 21, 2020
Potential but premie