Color palette pulled directly from sulkta.com's stylesheet — the same greens used on the website now drive the app theme: #166534 deep green (light-theme primary, top app bar background) #4ade80 bright lime (dark-theme primary, accents in dark mode) #86efac light green (primaryContainer in light theme) #e8f5e8 pale green (secondary container tint) #d97706 amber accent (tertiary) #374137 olive gray (secondary on light, container on dark) Replaces the made-up forest palette from vc=23 with the real Sulkta brand. Same M3 tonal-role mapping so derived surfaces stay consistent. TopAppBar redone NewPipe-style: solid deep-green bar with white "straw" title, white hamburger + search icons. Clear bold header instead of the previous white-with-a-pill-underneath layout. Material Icons swapped in everywhere we had emoji: drawer Person / History / PlaylistPlay / Download / Settings minibar PlayArrow / Pause / Close fullscreen Speed / Headphones / Videocam / Share / PictureInPictureAlt / KeyboardArrowDown Pulled in material-icons-extended (4 MB APK growth, all icons). Consistent renders across vendors; no more emoji font fallback drift. FeedRow gets a NewPipe-style duration pill burned into the bottom-right of every thumbnail (mm:ss / h:mm:ss). Live streams / mixes with no duration leave it off. Audit deferred-MED items addressed: MED-6: dropped the PlayerService STATE_ENDED auto-stop. Service shutdown is now driven only by onTaskRemoved + the minibar's ×. Removes the implicit "we'll never queue" assumption and is correct for a future autoplay/queue feature. LOW-7: DownloadsScreen adaptive poll — 1s while a download is active, 5s when idle. No more wasted DB queries when nothing is running. |
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| .github | ||
| .idea | ||
| app | ||
| assets | ||
| buildSrc | ||
| checkstyle | ||
| desktopApp | ||
| doc | ||
| docs/sulkta | ||
| fastlane/metadata/android | ||
| gradle | ||
| iosApp | ||
| rust | ||
| shared | ||
| strawApp | ||
| .editorconfig | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| build.gradle.kts | ||
| gradle.properties | ||
| gradlew | ||
| gradlew.bat | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| README.md | ||
| settings.gradle.kts | ||
We are rewriting large chunks of the codebase, to bring about a modern and stable NewPipe! You can download nightly builds here.
Please work on the refactor branch if you want to contribute new features. The current codebase is in maintenance mode and will only receive bugfixes.
NewPipe
A libre lightweight streaming front-end for Android.
Screenshots • Supported Services • Description • Features • Installation and updates • Contribution • Donate • License
Read this document in other languages: Deutsch, English, Español, Français, हिन्दी, Italiano, 한국어, Português Brasil, Polski, ਪੰਜਾਬੀ , 日本語, Română, Soomaali, Türkçe, 正體中文, অসমীয়া, Српски, العربية
Warning
THIS APP IS IN BETA, SO YOU MAY ENCOUNTER BUGS. IF YOU DO, OPEN AN ISSUE IN OUR GITHUB REPOSITORY BY FILLING OUT THE ISSUE TEMPLATE.
PUTTING NEWPIPE, OR ANY FORK OF IT, INTO THE GOOGLE PLAY STORE VIOLATES THEIR TERMS AND CONDITIONS.
Screenshots
Supported Services
NewPipe currently supports these services:
- YouTube (website) and YouTube Music (website) (wiki)
- PeerTube (website) and all its instances (open the website to know what that means!) (wiki)
- Bandcamp (website) (wiki)
- SoundCloud (website) (wiki)
- media.ccc.de (website) (wiki)
As you can see, NewPipe supports multiple video and audio services. Though it started off with YouTube, other people have added more services over the years, making NewPipe more and more versatile!
Partially due to circumstance, and partially due to its popularity, YouTube is the best supported out of these services. If you use or are familiar with any of these other services, please help us improve support for them! We're looking for maintainers for SoundCloud and PeerTube.
If you intend to add a new service, please get in touch with us first! Our docs provide more information on how a new service can be added to the app and to the NewPipe Extractor.
Description
NewPipe works by fetching the required data from the official API (e.g. PeerTube) of the service you're using. If the official API is restricted (e.g. YouTube) for our purposes, or is proprietary, the app parses the website or uses an internal API instead. This means that you don't need an account on any service to use NewPipe.
Also, since they are free and open source software, neither the app nor the Extractor use any proprietary libraries or frameworks, such as Google Play Services. This means you can use NewPipe on devices or custom ROMs that do not have Google apps installed.
Features
- Watch videos at resolutions up to 4K
- Listen to audio in the background, only loading the audio stream to save data
- Popup mode (floating player, aka Picture-in-Picture)
- Watch live streams
- Show/hide subtitles/closed captions
- Search videos and audios (on YouTube, you can specify the content language as well)
- Enqueue videos (and optionally save them as local playlists)
- Show/hide general information about videos (such as description and tags)
- Show/hide next/related videos
- Show/hide comments
- Search videos, audios, channels, playlists and albums
- Browse videos and audios within a channel
- Subscribe to channels (yes, without logging into any account!)
- Get notifications about new videos from channels you're subscribed to
- Create and edit channel groups (for easier browsing and management)
- Browse video feeds generated from your channel groups
- View and search your watch history
- Search and watch playlists (these are remote playlists, which means they're fetched from the service you're browsing)
- Create and edit local playlists (these are created and saved within the app, and have nothing to do with any service)
- Download videos/audios/subtitles (closed captions)
- Open in Kodi
- Watch/Block age-restricted material
Installation and updates
You can install NewPipe using one of the following methods:
- Add our custom repo to F-Droid and install it from there. The instructions are here: https://newpipe.net/FAQ/tutorials/install-add-fdroid-repo/
- Download the APK from GitHub Releases, compare the signing key and install it.
- Update via F-Droid. This is the slowest method of getting updates, as F-Droid must recognize changes, build the APK itself, sign it, and then push the update to users.
- Build a debug APK yourself. This is the fastest way to get new features on your device, but is much more complicated, so we recommend using one of the other methods.
- If you're interested in a specific feature or bugfix provided in a Pull Request in this repo, you can also download its APK from within the PR. Read the PR description for instructions. The great thing about PR-specific APKs is that they're installed side-by-side the official app, so you don't have to worry about losing your data or messing anything up.
We recommend method 1 for most users. APKs installed using method 1 or 2 are compatible with each other (meaning that if you installed NewPipe using either method 1 or 2, you can also update NewPipe using the other), but not with those installed using method 3. This is due to the same signing key (ours) being used for 1 and 2, but a different signing key (F-Droid's) being used for 3. Building a debug APK using method 4 excludes a key entirely. Signing keys help ensure that a user isn't tricked into installing a malicious update to an app. When using method 5, each APK is signed with a different random key supplied by GitHub Actions, so you cannot even update it. You will have to backup and restore the app data each time you wish to use a new APK.
In the meanwhile, if you want to switch sources for some reason (e.g. NewPipe's core functionality breaks and F-Droid doesn't have the latest update yet), we recommend following this procedure:
- Back up your data via Settings > Backup and Restore > Export Database so you keep your history, subscriptions, and playlists
- Uninstall NewPipe
- Download the APK from the new source and install it
- Import the data from step 1 via Settings > Backup and Restore > Import Database
Note
When you're importing a database into the official app, always make sure that it is the one you exported from the official app. If you import a database exported from an APK other than the official app, it may break things. Such an action is unsupported, and you should only do so when you're absolutely certain you know what you're doing.
APK Info
This is the SHA fingerprint of NewPipe's signing key to verify downloaded APKs which are signed by us. The fingerprint is also available on NewPipe's website. This is relevant for method 2.
CB:84:06:9B:D6:81:16:BA:FA:E5:EE:4E:E5:B0:8A:56:7A:A6:D8:98:40:4E:7C:B1:2F:9E:75:6D:F5:CF:5C:AB
Contribution
Whether you have ideas, translations, design changes, code cleaning, or even major code changes, help is always welcome. The app gets better and better with each contribution, no matter how big or small! If you'd like to get involved, check our contribution notes.
Donate
If you like NewPipe, you're welcome to send a donation. We prefer Liberapay, as it is both open-source and non-profit. For further info on donating to NewPipe, please visit our website.
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Privacy Policy
The NewPipe project aims to provide a private, anonymous experience for using web-based media services. Therefore, the app does not collect any data without your consent. NewPipe's privacy policy explains in detail what data is sent and stored when you send a crash report, or leave a comment in our blog. You can find the document here.
License
NewPipe is Free Software: You can use, study, share, and improve it at will. Specifically you can redistribute and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.












