nixpkgs/pkgs/development/tools/rakkess/default.nix
Fabián Heredia Montiel ff323ed355 treewide: vendorSha256 → vendorHash
via: `find pkgs/ -type f -exec sed -i 's/vendorSha256 = "sha256/vendorHash = "sha256/' {};`
2023-09-13 01:03:44 -06:00

33 lines
1.2 KiB
Nix

{ lib, buildGoModule, fetchFromGitHub }:
buildGoModule rec {
pname = "rakkess";
version = "0.5.1";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "corneliusweig";
repo = pname;
rev = "v${version}";
sha256 = "sha256-igovWWk8GfNmOS/NbZWfv9kox6QLNIbM09jdvA/lL3A=";
};
vendorHash = "sha256-lVxJ4wFBhHc8JVpkmqphLYPE9Z8Cr6o+aAHvC1naqyE=";
ldflags = [ "-s" "-w" "-X github.com/corneliusweig/rakkess/internal/version.version=v${version}" ];
meta = with lib; {
homepage = "https://github.com/corneliusweig/rakkess";
changelog = "https://github.com/corneliusweig/rakkess/releases/tag/v${version}";
description = "Review Access - kubectl plugin to show an access matrix for k8s server resources";
longDescription = ''
Have you ever wondered what access rights you have on a provided
kubernetes cluster? For single resources you can use
`kubectl auth can-i list deployments`, but maybe you are looking for a
complete overview? This is what rakkess is for. It lists access rights for
the current user and all server resources, similar to
`kubectl auth can-i --list`.
'';
license = licenses.asl20;
maintainers = with maintainers; [ jk ];
};
}