this post was submitted on 11 Aug 2023
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These are code health smells. Looking for the activity in a repository the number of contributors, the frequency of updates, these are all let you get a feeling for how well cared for a project is. Sometimes that doesn't matter, but it is definitely something you should factor in.
For any app that isn't network-facing and that works with protocols that haven't been changed in a long time, there is no point worrying over how "active" the development is on an app. If nothing has been broken, then nothing needs fixing. My music player has had all the features it needs for a decade, and continues to work to this day. Why change a good thing?
For those kind of apps I'd love to see like a heartbeat commit. Everything's fine. 2020 nothing to change. All's working well. Just code smell
Gotcha. But what's stopping cyber criminals from seeing these abandoned repos and possibly taking over and implement malware or what not
Have you ever used Github? People can't just push code to the main repo.
And all submissions to F-Droid are checked for this kind of thing.
I mean yes I use github for reference and sometimes downloading but I don't actually know a whole lot about it like push and pull requests and what not, as I haven't found a need to learn it yet. So what you're saying is to basically download apps from github instead of fdroid to ensure you get the latest?
No, I'm not. I'm saying that downloading from F-Droid is perfectly safe, as they verify all updates before putting them on the repo.
Ohhh I understand, thanks
So just because fdroid says an app hasn't been updated since 2020, that doesn't necessarily mean its not being maintend or is abandoned?
Its a strong indicator it isn't being maintained, and it is abandoned. But its not a guarantee, some code is very mature, but its the exception rather then the rule