nixpkgs/pkgs/applications/misc/qMasterPassword/default.nix

49 lines
1.9 KiB
Nix

{ stdenv, fetchFromGitHub, qtbase, qmake, libX11, libXtst, openssl, libscrypt }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "qMasterPassword";
version = "1.2.2";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
owner = "bkueng";
repo = name;
rev = "v${version}";
sha256 = "0l0jarvfdc69rcjl2wa0ixq8gp3fmjsy9n84m38sxf3n9j2bh13c";
};
buildInputs = [ qtbase libX11 libXtst openssl libscrypt ];
nativeBuildInputs = [ qmake ];
# Upstream install is mostly defunct. It hardcodes target.path and doesn't
# install anything but the binary.
installPhase = if stdenv.isDarwin then ''
mkdir -p "$out"/{Applications,bin}
mv qMasterPassword.app "$out"/Applications/
ln -s ../Applications/qMasterPassword.app/Contents/MacOS/qMasterPassword "$out"/bin/qMasterPassword
'' else ''
mkdir -p $out/bin
mkdir -p $out/share/{applications,doc/qMasterPassword,icons/qmasterpassword,icons/hicolor/512x512/apps}
mv qMasterPassword $out/bin
mv data/qMasterPassword.desktop $out/share/applications
mv LICENSE README.md $out/share/doc/qMasterPassword
mv data/icons/app_icon.png $out/share/icons/hicolor/512x512/apps/qmasterpassword.png
mv data/icons/* $out/share/icons/qmasterpassword
'';
meta = with stdenv.lib; {
description = "Stateless Master Password Manager";
longDescription = ''
Access all your passwords using only a single master password. But in
contrast to other managers it does not store any passwords: Unique
passwords are generated from the master password and a site name. This
means you automatically get different passwords for each account and
there is no password file that can be lost or get stolen. There is also
no need to trust any online password service.
'';
homepage = https://github.com/bkueng/qMasterPassword;
license = licenses.gpl3;
maintainers = [ maintainers.tadeokondrak ];
platforms = platforms.all;
};
}