About Us


Flatpak is developed by an independent community, made up of contributors, volunteers and supporting organizations. It is a true upstream open source project, dedicated to providing technology and services that can be used by all, with no vendor lock-in. We have strong links to other Free Software projects, including the Freedesktop project.

All our code is freely available, with no contributor agreement required. Volunteers and contributing organizations are welcome, as equal partners.

Contact


Private mailing list for security issues

Issues with this website can be reported through its GitHub project.

Flatpak History


August 2007
Alexander Larsson releases Glick, his first app bundling framework
November 2011
Glick 2 is released, a modernized version of the first Glick framework
July 2012
“GNOME OS” session held at GUADEC, includes initial planning for a new app bundling format
September 2012
Alexander Larsson releases experimental “bundler” framework
January 2013
“Linux Apps” proposal discussed at the GNOME Developer Experience hackfest, Brussels
December 2014
Work begins on xdg-app, which later becomes Flatpak
March 2015
xdg-app 0.1 released, the very first version of Flatpak
December 2015
GNOME's “Software” gains the ability to install xdg-app applications
May 2016
xdg-app renamed to Flatpak, 0.6.0 released; accompanying press release included endorsements by Red Hat, Endless Computers and Collabora
June 2016
Work on desktop portals security framework begins
June 2016
LibreOffice is the first major application to adopt Flatpak for publishing on Linux
July 2016
GTK+ 3.21.4 released with initial support for the portals framework
August 2016
Endless OS 3.0 released, the first publicly available OS to use Flatpak by default. Adoption of Flatpak by Apertis IVI also becomes public knowledge.
November 2016
ClearLinux announces their adoption of Flatpak
December 2016
Flatpak 0.8.0 released, the start of the first stable series with long-term support
May 2017
Initial soft launch of Flathub hosting service
May 2017
KDE Plasma 5.10 released with initial support for portals
October 2017
Flatpak 0.10.0 released, marking the start of the second supported stable release series
October 2017
KDE Plasma 5.11 released, “Discover” gains the ability to install Flatpak apps
October 2017
GIMP adopts Flatpak to publish on Linux
November 2017
Linux Mint 18.3 released, includes out of the box Flatpak integration
August 2018
Flatpak 1.0 released, the first release in a new stable series, with major new features; Flathub beta period ends; Freedesktop runtime 18.08 released with new support period policy
September 2018
KDE introduces the KDE Testing Applications Flatpak repository; commit
December 2019
elementary OS 5.1 Hera released, includes out of the box Flatpak integration
April 2020
Mozilla adopts Flatpak to publish Firefox on Linux
April 2020
System76 releases Pop!_OS 20.04, includes out of the box Flatpak integration
October 2021
1Password adopts Flatpak to publish on Linux
Febuary 2022
Valve releases the Steam Deck; a handheld video game console with out of the box Flatpak and Flathub integration
Febuary 2022
OBS Studio adopts Flatpak to publish on Linux
May 2022
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Workstation 9 released, includes out of the box Flatpak integration
October 2022
Flathub introduces verified status; commit
April 2023
Purism introduces Flatpak and the PureOS Flatpak repository; announcement
April 2023
Valve adopts portals for the popular Steam application
May 2023
Flathub offers more than 2000 apps and celebrates 1B total downloads
October 2023
Discord adopts Flatpak to publish on Linux