'cloudflared' is a multi-purpose client-side tool for CloudFlare Argo
Tunnel, CloudFlare Access, as well as including a simple DNS-over-HTTP
(DoH) proxy tool as well.
However, 'cloudflared' is NOT available under an open source license.
Furthermore, the exact terms of redistribution (namely, if we are able
to redistribute binaries at all) are not entirely clear to me. As a
result, I have filed the following bug report concerning the terms of
redistribution for the source code and binaries:
https://github.com/cloudflare/cloudflared/issues/53
'cloudflared' does have source code available, however, and it
encourages users to use 'go install' in order to set it up, in fact (or
download their prebuilt, compiled binaries). So using the source seems
to be encouraged. Even then, I'm still not sure if Hydra can serve these
binaries.
In lieu of a more pointed answer regarding source/binary licensing, and
to avoid keeping this expression in my private tree, I've marked it as
'unfree' (to avoid Hydra serving it in any way) as well as compiled from
source (to avoid any 'redistribution allowed while unmodified' terms
that may crop up).
The dependencies for this build were generated using 'dep2nix'.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
Rootston is just a reference compositor so it doesn't make that much
sense to have a module for it. Upstream doesn't really like it as well:
"Rootston will never be intended for downstream packages, it's an
internal thing we use for testing." - SirCmpwn [0]
Removing the package and the module shouldn't cause much problems
because it was marked as broken until
886131c243. If required the package can
still be accessed via wlroots.bin (could be useful for testing
purposes).
[0]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/38344#issuecomment-378449256
> WARNING: The next major version of capybara-webkit will require at
> least version 5.0 of Qt. You're using version 4.8.7.
I went to 5.9 instead of 5.11 because 5.11 doesn't currently build on
Darwin, whereas 5.9 can build on both Darwin and Linux, and is still
well within the >=5.0 requirement.
Allows for adding Perl libraries in the same way as for Python. Doesn't
really need to be a function, since there's only one perlPackages in
nixpkgs, but I went for consistency with the python plugin.