Provides access to shared network storage.
About this app
CIFS Documents Provider is an Android app to provide access to shared online storage.
[Features]
* Provide other apps with access to shared network storage via the Storage Access Framework (SAF). * Provides access to files and directories. * Supports SMB (Samba, Common Internet File System (CIFS), Windows Network Shared Folder), FTP, FTPS and SFTP. * Share and transfer files on online storage. * Multiple connection settings can be stored. * Supports connection settings export/import. * Supports dark mode. * Can be treated as local storage (configuration required) * Notifications can be displayed to prevent task kills. (configuration required)
[Objective]
* Import and export of files created by the app. * Manage files and directories with the Storage Manager app. * Play music, videos, etc. with the media player app. * Direct saving of photos taken with the camera app.
[Note]
* No file management function in this app. * To use this app, your apps must support SAF (Storage Access Framework). * Apps that assume local storage may not work properly. * Apps may crash when specified as a storage destination for streaming audio or video data.
[How to use]
See the following page. (Japanese) https://github.com/wa2c/cifs-documents-provider/wiki/Manual-ja
[Sources]
GitHub https://github.com/wa2c/cifs-documents-provider
[Issues]
GitHub Issue https://github.com/wa2c/cifs-documents-provider/issues
Please post here if you have bug reports, Future requests, or other information.
Licensed under MIT, by Atsushi Wada.
What's New in v2.4.0
Imported from the F-Droid repository index.
Version history
Oct 4, 2025 · 18.3 MB · Android API 26–35 · code 31
Imported from the F-Droid repository index.
SHA-256 215f005994efed4a55e10708132ae41543ab7af48d5409d38c634090cfa15768
May 17, 2024 · 18.4 MB · Android API 26–34 · code 29
Imported from the F-Droid repository index.
SHA-256 9623332dc962c06a5dafd2b2fd18861c12621f3adf6b66b0f0490b6242d97573
Apr 22, 2024 · 18.3 MB · Android API 26–34 · code 28
Imported from the F-Droid repository index.
SHA-256 f023ea8596c22a28738632277b23760243c80c51d7f1e405439775f7ce9c7612
Will it run on your device?
92%
- Runs on a broad range of modern Android versions.
- Multiple CPU architectures are covered.
- Aligned with the latest Android target SDK expectations.
Installation Guide
Open Settings on your Android device
Go to Security → Unknown sources (or Install unknown apps)
Enable "Allow from this source" for your browser or file manager
Open the downloaded APK file from your Downloads folder
Tap "Install" and wait for installation to complete
Launch the app from your home screen
Make sure to re-enable Unknown Sources restrictions after installation for security.
How to install this safely
How to verify the file you downloaded
Before you install anything, confirm the file is the one described here. On a computer, run shasum -a 256 your-download.apk (macOS or Linux) or certutil -hashfile your-download.apk SHA256 (Windows), then compare the output character-for-character with the SHA-256 on this page. If a single character differs, the file is not the build we recorded — delete it.
What the signing certificate proves
Every Android app is signed with a private key that only its developer holds. The fingerprint on this page is a hash of the matching public certificate, and it proves continuity rather than identity: it tells you a build came from whoever signed the earlier ones. Android enforces this at install time — if a package claiming to be com.wa2c.android.cifsdocumentsprovider is signed with a different key, the system will refuse to install it over your existing copy. A fingerprint that changes between releases is worth pausing on, because a repackaged app that has been modified by someone else cannot keep the original signature.
How to roll back to an earlier version
If the current release misbehaves, 2.3.0 is the last build before it. Android will not install an older version code over a newer one, so you must uninstall CIFS Documents Provider first — which clears its local data unless you have a backup. Reinstall the older APK only if its signing fingerprint matches the build you already trust, and check the API range: an older release may target an Android version your device has moved past.
Why we list sources instead of hosting everything
The official store channel is almost always the right choice: it updates automatically and carries the publisher's own distribution guarantees. A direct APK is useful when a device has no store access, when a rollout has not reached your region, or when you need a specific version — and only when the publisher has authorized that copy. APKBrowse does not list pirated, cracked, or unauthorized rebuilds of CIFS Documents Provider, and a listing is removed when the evidence for it stops holding up.
Get CIFS Documents Provider
Every source we list for com.wa2c.android.cifsdocumentsprovider is legality-reviewed. Pirated or cracked builds are never offered.
Other sources
F-Droid listing
officialF-Droid builds this app from source and signs it. This is its official listing, with older builds and full release notes.
Source code
verified publisherThe upstream repository this build is compiled from.
We check legality and signature continuity, but device behaviour still varies. Install at your own discretion.
App Information
Security Verification
We record provenance; we do not run malware scans. Verify the hash yourself before installing.
SHA-256 Hash
215f005994efed4a55e10708132ae41543ab7af48d5409d38c634090cfa15768
Signing certificate
32644488ea8f8247d8e107b141fbb5f1674864ad09156ba8c357a1fca9b57aeb
Permissions Required
Previous Versions
The signing certificate fingerprint for this release is on record, so a build that does not match it did not come from this publisher.
Report a problem with this listing
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