Dev Tools

197 open source Dev Tools apps

XMLForge
APK
XMLForge is a simple and powerful XML formatter & attribute reordering tool for Android.Features:Formats XML with proper indentationReorders attributes in a structured waySupports Android XML filesOne-click copy to clipboardSimple and intuitive UIHow It WorksPaste or load your XML content.Tap the Format button to clean up the structure.View the formatted output with attributes ordered correctly.Copy the formatted XML with a single tap.
GitHubIzzyOnDroid
disky - Find your biggest diskspace thieves!
APK
disky can analyze your device and show your data split by directory. Apps are also included, so you get the full picture of what uses your storage. Fast Even larger devices can be scanned in mere seconds! Multi Storage All your local filesystems are supported! Material You Integrates nicely in your android experience!
F-DroidGitHub
httpmon
APK
A simple HTTP monitoring application. Get notified when remote web sites are down.
F-Droid
k3pler
APK
k3pler is a network connection blocker and packet analyzer built on top of local HTTP proxy. It offers a.o. the following features: * Show network traffic in a list (HTTP Request/Response) * details about requests/responses * Blacklist connection after getting detailed information * Edit/Remove item at blacklist - clear blacklist
F-DroidGitHub
pyLauncher
APK
Install the server (see the source code page) on a Raspberry PI (or other) then launch Python program files from the user interface on the Android. The results of the program are returned to the Android application, and displayed on the screen. * Connect any number of pyLauncher Android clients to the server on your local area network. * Select a Python.py file from the Android user interface, and have it run on the Raspberry Pi. * Results of each Python file run are broadcast to all connected Android clients
F-Droid
qBittorrent Manager
APK
🚧 APP IS CURRENTLY IN ALPHA STAGE 🚧 This app aims to provide a modern and easy approach to handle your qBittorrent WebUI provided by self-hosted servers (not a standalone downloader). Features supported: āœ… Viewing all the files on the server āœ… Performing various actions (rename, recheck, etc.) on a specific torrent āœ… Uploading of torrents using files and links āœ… Persistent notification for connection status of server Additional features like sorting, searching, server statistics coming soon.... Note: In order to ensure the best user experience, please try to upgrade qBittorrent to 4.3.x or higher. qBittorrent Manager is completely open sourced at https://github.com/Yash-Garg/qBittorrent-Manager, and any issues can be reported at https://github.com/Yash-Garg/qBittorrent-Manager/issues
F-DroidGitHub
rbtlui
APK
rbtlui provides a graphical interface to explore the builders verifying the apps provided by IzzyOnDroid on reproducibility. Those builders are based on rbtlog.Features of rbtlui:See an overview across multiple builders across IoD (more F-Droid compatible stores coming)See logs per builder per tagSee stats
IzzyOnDroid
tagdrop
APK
TagDrop turns small files — text, HTML pages, images, audio, SVGs — into self-contained QR codes that work completely offline. Print one on a sticker or sheet of paper and leave it somewhere; anyone with the TagDrop app (or any QR scanner that follows tagdrop: links) can scan it and view the content immediately, with no internet connection, server, or account required. Think of it as a digital geocache: instead of a logbook in a box, the "cache" is the QR code itself. What you can do with it Drop a single page — encode text, an HTML page, an SVG image, or JSON into one QR code, either in-app (Create Cache) or with the web generator. Drop a whole "paper" — a printable sheet with a directory QR code (a paper manifest) plus one QR per file, built in-app (Create Paper) or with the web generator. Pages can link to each other with ordinary relative links, so a small static site survives being printed and scanned back in. Spread large content across multiple codes — split a payload too big for one QR into multiple sector codes placed along a trail. The app collects sectors in any order, reassembles and verifies them, and can recover a single missing sector from an optional parity code. Build trails, collections, and replies — link papers together with location hints, tag a loose set of stickers with a shared collection so they group into one card on the home screen and map, or mark a code as a reply to another to thread a conversation across drops. Browse offline — scanned pages render in an in-app viewer, with search and #hashtag filtering, and a hex/CBOR inspector for the curious. The Collections, History, and Map tabs let you revisit, locate, and manage everything you've found, and a single file can back up or restore it all. Tap instead of scan — write any TagDrop code to a blank or rewritable NFC tag, then read it back with a tap instead of the camera. How it works Every code carries a tagdrop: URI — a CBOR sequence (version, type, and payload map), Base41-encoded so it packs efficiently into a QR code's alphanumeric mode. Content can optionally be DEFLATE-compressed. IDs are content-addressed (SHA-256 based), so identical content always gets the same ID regardless of who created it. Status V2.1 — CBOR-sequence envelope encoding with content split into sectors plus optional parity recovery, paper manifests with multi-file directories and relative-link navigation, geographic trails via "related" hints, ad-hoc collections, reply threading, an in-app scanner with a live scan board, NFC tag read/write, search and #hashtag filtering, full backup/restore, and a Map tab for located finds.
F-DroidGitHub
tldr man-pages
APK
The tldr-pages project is a collection of community-maintained help pages for command-line tools, that aims to be a simpler, more approachable complement to traditional man pages. Maybe you are new to the command-line world? Or just a little rusty? Or perhaps you can't always remember the arguments to lsof, or tar? It certainly doesn't help that the first option explained in man tar is: -b blocksize Specify the block size, in 512-byte records, for tape drive I/O. This app is just that: an ever-growing collection of examples for the most common UNIX, Linux, macOS, SunOS and Windows command-line tools.
F-DroidGitHub
Page 9