The metadata file is using the same .ini file format that is used
for systemd unit files or application .desktop files.
[Application] or [Runtime]¶
Metadata for applications starts with an [Application] group,
metadata for runtimes with a [Runtime] group.
The following keys can be present in these groups:
name (string)
The name of the application or runtime. This key is
mandatory.
runtime (string)
The fully qualified name of the runtime that is used by
the application. This key is mandatory for applications.
sdk (string)
The fully qualified name of the sdk that matches the
runtime. Available since 0.1.
command (string)
The command to run. Only relevant for applications.
Available since 0.1.
required-flatpak (string list)
The required version of Flatpak to run this application
or runtime. For applications, this was available since 0.8.0. For runtimes,
this was available since 0.9.1, and backported to 0.8.3 for the 0.8.x branch.
Flatpak after version 1.4.3 and 1.2.5 support multiple versions
here. This can be useful if you need to support features that are backported
to a previous stable series. For example if you want to use a feature added
in 1.6.0 that was also backported to 1.4.4 you would use 1.6.0;1.4.4;. Note
that older versions of flatpak will just use the first element in the list,
so make that the largest version.
tags (string list)
Tags to include in AppStream XML. Typical values in use
on Flathub include beta, stable, proprietary and
upstream-maintained. Available since 0.4.12.
[Context]¶
This group determines various system resources that may be shared
with the application when it is run in a flatpak sandbox.
All keys in this group (and the group itself) are optional.
shared (list)
List of subsystems to share with the host system.
Possible subsystems: network, ipc. Available since 0.3.
sockets (list)
List of well-known sockets to make available in the
sandbox. Possible sockets: x11, wayland, fallback-x11, pulseaudio,
session-bus, system-bus, ssh-auth, pcsc, cups. When making a socket available,
flatpak also sets well-known environment variables like DISPLAY or
DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS to let the application find sockets that are not in a
fixed location. Available since 0.3.
devices (list)
List of devices to make available in the sandbox.
Possible values:
dri
Graphics direct rendering (/dev/dri). Available since
0.3.
kvm
Virtualization (/dev/kvm). Available since 0.6.12.
all
All device nodes in /dev, but not /dev/shm (which is
separately specified). Available since 0.6.6.
shm
Access to the host /dev/shm (/dev/shm). Available since
1.6.1.
filesystems (list)
List of filesystem subsets to make available to the
application. Possible values:
home
The entire home directory. Available since 0.3.
home/path
Alias for ~/path Available since 1.10. For better
compatibility with older Flatpak versions, prefer to write this as
~/path.
host
The entire host file system, except for directories that
are handled specially by Flatpak. In particular, this shares /home, /media,
/opt, /run/media and /srv if they exist.
/dev is not shared: use devices=all; instead.
Parts of /sys are always shared. This option does not make
additional files in /sys available.
Additionally, this keyword provides all of the same directories in
/run/host as the host-os and host-etc keywords. If this
keyword is used in conjunction with one of the host- keywords,
whichever access level is higher (more permissive) will be used for the
directories in /run/host: for example, host:rw;host-os:ro; is equivalent to
host:rw;.
These other reserved directories are currently excluded: /app,
/bin, /boot, /etc, /lib, /lib32, /lib64, /proc, /root, /run, /sbin, /tmp,
/usr, /var.
Available since 0.3.
host-os
The host operating system's libraries, executables and
static data from /usr and the related directories /bin, /lib, /lib32, /lib64,
/sbin. Additionally, this keyword provides access to a subset of /etc that is
associated with packaged libraries and executables, even if the
host-etc keyword was not used: /etc/ld.so.cache, (used by the dynamic
linker) and /etc/alternatives (on operating systems that use it, such as
Debian).
To avoid conflicting with the Flatpak runtime, these are mounted
in the sandbox at /run/host/usr, /run/host/etc/ld.so.cache and so on.
Available since 1.7.
host-etc
The host operating system's configuration from /etc.
To avoid conflicting with the Flatpak runtime, this is mounted in
the sandbox at /run/host/etc.
Available since 1.7.
xdg-desktop, xdg-documents, xdg-download,
xdg-music, xdg-pictures, xdg-public-share,
xdg-videos, xdg-templates
freedesktop.org special directories[1]. Available
since 0.3.
xdg-desktop/path,
xdg-documents/path, etc.
Subdirectories of freedesktop.org special directories.
Available since 0.4.13.
xdg-cache, xdg-config, xdg-data
Directories defined by the freedesktop.org Base
Directory Specification[2]. Available since 0.6.14.
xdg-cache/path,
xdg-config/path, xdg-data/path
Subdirectories of directories defined by the
freedesktop.org Base Directory Specification. Available since 0.6.14.
xdg-run/path
Subdirectories of the XDG_RUNTIME_DIR defined by
the freedesktop.org Base Directory Specification. Note that xdg-run on
its own is not supported. Available since 0.4.13.
/path
An arbitrary absolute path. Available since 0.3.
~/path
An arbitrary path relative to the home directory.
Available since 0.3.
~
The same as home. Available since 1.10. For better
compatibility with older Flatpak versions, prefer to write this as
home.
One of the above followed by :ro
Make the given directory available read-only.
One of the above followed by :rw
Make the given directory available read/write. This is
the default.
One of the above followed by :create
Make the given directory available read/write, and create
it if it does not already exist.
persistent (list)
List of homedir-relative paths to make available at the
corresponding path in the per-application home directory, allowing the
locations to be used for persistent data when the application does not have
access to the real homedir. For instance making ".myapp" persistent
would make "~/.myapp" in the sandbox a bind mount to
"~/.var/app/org.my.App/.myapp", thus allowing an unmodified
application to save data in the per-application location. Available since
0.3.
features (list)
List of features available or unavailable to the
application, currently from the following list:
devel
Allow system calls used by development-oriented tools
such as perf, strace and gdb. Available since
0.6.10.
multiarch
Allow running multilib/multiarch binaries, for example
i386 binaries in an x86_64 environment. Available since 0.6.12.
bluetooth
Allow the application to use bluetooth (AF_BLUETOOTH)
sockets. Note, for bluetooth to fully work you must also have network access.
Available since 0.11.8.
canbus
Allow the application to use canbus (AF_CAN) sockets.
Note, for this work you must also have network access. Available since
1.0.3.
A feature can be prefixed with ! to indicate the absence of
that feature, for example !devel if development and debugging are not
allowed.
unset-environment (list)
A list of names of environment variables to unset. Note
that environment variables to set to a value (possibly empty) appear in the
[Environment] group instead.
[Instance]¶
This group only appears in /.flatpak-info for a running app, and
not in the metadata files written by application authors. It is filled in by
Flatpak itself.
instance-id (string)
The ID of the running instance. This number is used as
the name of the directory in XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/.flatpak where Flatpak
stores information about this instance.
instance-path (string)
The absolute path on the host system of the app's
persistent storage area in $HOME/.var.
app-path (string)
The absolute path on the host system of the app's app
files, as mounted at /app inside the container. Available since 0.6.10.
app-commit (string)
The commit ID of the application that is running.
app-extensions (list of strings)
A list of app extensions that are mounted into the
running instance. The format for each list item is
EXTENSION_ID=COMMIT.
branch (string)
The branch of the app, for example stable. Available
since 0.6.10.
arch (string)
The architecture of the running instance.
flatpak-version (string)
The version number of the Flatpak version that ran this
app. Available since 0.6.11.
runtime-path (string)
The absolute path on the host system of the app's runtime
files, as mounted at /usr inside the container. Available since 0.6.10.
runtime-commit (string)
The commit ID of the runtime that is used.
runtime-extensions (list of strings)
A list of runtime extensions that are mounted into the
running instance. The format for each list item is
EXTENSION_ID=COMMIT.
extra-args (string)
Extra arguments that were passed to flatpak run.
sandbox (boolean)
Whether the --sandbox option was passed to flatpak
run.
build (boolean)
Whether this instance was created by flatpak build.
session-bus-proxy (boolean)
True if this app cannot access the D-Bus session bus
directly (either it goes via a proxy, or it cannot access the session bus at
all). Available since 0.8.0.
system-bus-proxy (boolean)
True if this app cannot access the D-Bus system bus
directly (either it goes via a proxy, or it cannot access the system bus at
all). Available since 0.8.0.
[Session Bus Policy]¶
If the sockets key is not allowing full access to the D-Bus
session bus, then flatpak provides filtered access.
The default policy for the session bus only allows the application
to own its own application ID and subnames. For instance if the app is
called "org.my.App", it can only own "org.my.App" and
"org.my.App.*". Its also only allowed to talk to the bus itself
(org.freedesktop.DBus) and the portal APIs APIs (bus names of the form
org.freedesktop.portal.*).
Additionally the app is always allowed to reply to messages sent
to it, and emit broadcast signals (but these will not reach other sandboxed
apps unless they are allowed to talk to your app.
If the [Session Bus Policy] group is present, it provides policy
for session bus access.
Each key in this group has the form of a D-Bus bus name or prefix
thereof, for example org.gnome.SessionManager or
org.freedesktop.portal.*
The possible values for entry are, in increasing order or
access:
none
The bus name or names in question is invisible to the
application. Available since 0.2.
see
The bus name or names can be enumerated by the
application. Available since 0.2.
talk
The application can send messages/ and receive replies
and signals from the bus name or names. Available since 0.2.
own
The application can own the bus name or names (as well as
all the above). Available since 0.2.
[System Bus Policy]¶
If the sockets key is not allowing full access to the D-Bus
system bus, then flatpak does not make the system bus available unless the
[System Bus Policy] group is present and provides a policy for filtered
access. Available since 0.2.
Entries in this group have the same form as for the [Session Bus
Policy] group. However, the app has no permissions by default.
[Environment]¶
The [Environment] group specifies environment variables to set
when running the application. Available since 0.3.
Entries in this group have the form VAR=VALUE where
VAR is the name of an environment variable to set.
Note that environment variables can also be unset (removed from
the environment) by listing them in the unset-environment entry of
the [Context] group.
[Extension NAME]¶
Runtimes and applications can define extension points, which allow
optional, additional runtimes to be mounted at a specified location inside
the sandbox when they are present on the system. Typical uses for extension
points include translations for applications, or debuginfo for sdks. The
name of the extension point is specified as part of the group heading. Since
0.11.4, the name may optionally include a tag in the NAME in the name@tag
ref syntax if you wish to use different configurations (eg, versions) of the
same extension concurrently. The "tag" is effectively ignored, but
is necessary in order to allow the same extension name to be specified more
than once.
directory (string)
The relative path at which the extension will be mounted
in the sandbox. If the extension point is for an application, the path is
relative to /app, otherwise it is relative to /usr. This key is mandatory.
Available since 0.1.
version (string)
The branch to use when looking for the extension. If this
is not specified, it defaults to the branch of the application or runtime that
the extension point is for. Available since 0.4.1.
versions (string)
The branches to use when looking for the extension. If
this is not specified, it defaults to the branch of the application or runtime
that the extension point is for. Available since 0.9.1, and backported to the
0.8.x branch in 0.8.4.
add-ld-path (string)
A path relative to the extension point directory that
will be appended to LD_LIBRARY_PATH. Available since 0.9.1, and backported to
the 0.8.x branch in 0.8.3.
merge-dirs (string)
A list of relative paths of directories below the
extension point directory that will be merged. Available since 0.9.1, and
backported to the 0.8.x branch in 0.8.3.
download-if (string)
A condition that must be true for the extension to be
auto-downloaded. As of 1.1.1 this supports multiple conditions separated by
semi-colons.
These are the supported conditions:
active-gl-driver
Is true if the name of the active GL driver matches the
extension point basename. Available since 0.9.1, and backported to the 0.8.x
branch in 0.8.3.
active-gtk-theme
Is true if the name of the current GTK theme (via
org.gnome.desktop.interface GSetting) matches the extension point basename.
Added 0.10.1.
have-intel-gpu
Is true if the i915 kernel module is loaded. Added
0.10.1.
on-xdg-desktop-*
Is true if the suffix (case-insensitively) is in the
XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP env var. For example on-xdg-desktop-GNOME-classic. Added
1.1.1.
autoprune-unless (string)
A condition that must be false for the extension to be
considered unused when pruning. For example, flatpak uninstall --unused
uses this information. The only currently recognized value is
active-gl-driver, which is true if the name of the active GL driver matches
the extension point basename. Available since 0.11.8.
enable-if (string)
A condition that must be true for the extension to be
enabled. As of 1.1.1 this supports multiple conditions separated by
semi-colons. See download-if for available conditions.
subdirectory-suffix (string)
A suffix that gets appended to the directory name. This
is very useful when the extension point naming scheme is "reversed".
For example, an extension point for GTK+ themes would be
/usr/share/themes/$NAME/gtk-3.0, which could be achieved using
subdirectory-suffix=gtk-3.0. Available since 0.9.1, and backported to the
0.8.x branch in 0.8.3.
subdirectories (boolean)
If this key is set to true, then flatpak will look for
extensions whose name is a prefix of the extension point name, and mount them
at the corresponding name below the subdirectory. Available since 0.1.
no-autodownload (boolean)
Whether to automatically download extensions matching
this extension point when updating or installing a 'related' application or
runtime. Available since 0.6.7.
locale-subset (boolean)
If set, then the extensions are partially downloaded by
default, based on the currently configured locales. This means that the
extension contents should be a set of directories with the language code as
name. Available since 0.9.13 (and 0.6.6 for any extensions called
*.Locale)
autodelete (boolean)
Whether to automatically delete extensions matching this
extension point when deleting a 'related' application or runtime. Available
since 0.6.7.
collection-id (string)
The ID of the collection that this extension point
belongs to. If this is unspecified, it defaults to the collection ID of the
application or runtime that the extension point is for. Currently, extension
points must be in the same collection as the application or runtime that they
are for. Available since 0.99.1.
[ExtensionOf]¶
This optional group may be present if the runtime is an
extension.
ref (string)
The ref of the runtime or application that this extension
belongs to. Available since 0.9.1.
runtime (string)
The runtime this extension will be inside of. If it is an
app extension, this is the app's runtime; otherwise, this is identical to ref,
without the runtime/ prefix. Available since 1.5.0.
priority (integer)
The priority to give this extension when looking for the
best match. Default is 0. Available since 0.9.1, and backported to the 0.8.x
branch in 0.8.3.
tag (string)
The tag name to use when searching for this extension's
mount point in the parent flatpak. Available since 0.11.4.
This optional group may be present if the runtime or application
uses extra data that gets downloaded separately. The data in this group gets
merged into the repository summary, with the xa.extra-data-sources key.
If multiple extra data sources are present, their uri, size and
checksum keys are grouped together by using the same suffix. If only one
extra data source is present, the suffix can be omitted.
NoRuntime (boolean)
Whether to mount the runtime while running the
/app/bin/apply_extra script. Defaults to true, i.e. not mounting the runtime.
Available since 0.9.1, and backported to the 0.8.x branch in 0.8.4.
uriX (string)
The uri for extra data source X. The only
supported uri schemes are http and https. Available since 0.6.13.
sizeX (integer)
The size for extra data source X. Available since
0.6.13.
checksumX (string)
The sha256 sum for extra data source X. Available
since 0.6.13.
[Policy SUBSYSTEM]¶
Subsystems can define their own policies to be placed in a group
whose name has this form. Their values are treated as lists, in which items
can have their meaning negated by prepending ! to the value. They are not
otherwise parsed by Flatpak. Available since 0.6.13.