The MIT OR Apache-2.0 SOURCE license is clean (audit found no copied copyleft); the
gaps were all binary-distribution (Layer-2). This makes the shipped artifacts honest:
- Windows host + client: bundled FFmpeg BtbN gpl-shared -> lgpl-shared (AMF/QSV/decode
unaffected; the GPL-only x264/x265 were never used), and ship the FFmpeg LGPL notice
+ license text in the installer + MSIX (licenses/).
- THIRD-PARTY-NOTICES.txt generated + bundled into installer/MSIX/deb/rpm. Offline
generator (scripts/gen-third-party-notices.{py,sh}) + cargo-about config (about.toml/
.hbs) with a permissive-only accepted-license allow-list as a copyleft regression gate.
- Reword the win32u GPU-preference hook comments to reflect independent reimplementation
(no Apollo/Sunshine GPL-3.0 source copied).
- README dual-license + inbound=outbound contributor clause + non-affiliation trademark
disclaimer; new CONTRIBUTING.md.
- LICENSE files into the standalone driver + vk-layer workspaces; deb copyright holder
aligned to "unom and the punktfunk contributors".
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
punktfunk Windows client — MSIX packaging
The Windows client ships as signed MSIX packages so Windows boxes get a real package (Start
tile, clean install/uninstall) instead of a loose exe. CI builds + publishes them from
.gitea/workflows/windows-msix.yml to Gitea's
generic package registry (https://git.unom.io/unom/-/packages), on every main push that
touches the client (canary) and on vX.Y.Z release tags (stable) — see
Release Channels.
Two architectures, one x64 runner. Both x64 and arm64 packages are produced off the single
x64 Windows runner — x86_64-pc-windows-msvc builds natively, aarch64-pc-windows-msvc is
cross-compiled (the x64 MSVC toolset ships the ARM64 cross compiler; the matrix points FFMPEG_DIR
at the runner's ARM64 FFmpeg tree, C:\Users\Public\ffmpeg-arm64). Artifacts are arch-suffixed
(..._x64.msix / ..._arm64.msix, each with its matching .cer); pack-msix.ps1 -Arch x64|arm64
stamps the manifest ProcessorArchitecture and names the output. See
windows.yml for the cross-build rationale.
What's in the package
pack-msix.ps1 assembles a layout from a cargo build --release and runs makeappx + signtool:
| File | Source |
|---|---|
punktfunk-client.exe |
the release build |
Microsoft.WindowsAppRuntime.Bootstrap.dll, resources.pri |
auto-staged by windows-reactor's build.rs |
SDL3.dll |
auto-staged by the sdl3 crate |
avcodec/avformat/avutil/swscale/swresample/...-*.dll |
FFMPEG_DIR\bin |
Assets\*.png |
checked-in tile/store logos (rasterized from packaging/flatpak/io.unom.Punktfunk.svg) |
AppxManifest.xml |
the template here, with {VERSION}/{PUBLISHER} substituted |
Why an "unpackaged" WinUI app packages cleanly
windows-reactor calls MddBootstrapInitialize2 with OnPackageIdentity_NOOP
(crates/libs/reactor/src/app.rs), so under MSIX package identity the App SDK bootstrapper is
a no-op and the runtime is resolved from the manifest's <PackageDependency> on
Microsoft.WindowsAppRuntime.2 instead (reactor pins WINDOWSAPPSDK_RELEASE_MAJORMINOR = 0x20000
= 2.0). It's a full-trust Win32 app (EntryPoint="Windows.FullTrustApplication" + runFullTrust)
because it owns raw D3D11, Win32 low-level input hooks, WASAPI and SDL3.
Versioning
MSIX requires a strictly 4-part numeric version. The workflow computes:
vX.Y.Ztag →X.Y.Z.0(THE release; any-rc/+metasuffix is dropped for MSIX). Published to the stablelatest/alias and attached to the unified Gitea Release.mainpush /workflow_dispatch→0.3.<run_number>.0(canary, climbs by run number;canary/alias).
Signing & install
CI signs every build with a stable self-signed code-signing cert (CN=unom, SHA-1
CD1EFDEEEC9743AFC38F56C5AF30C5A3009BE941, valid to 2036). Its public half is checked in as
punktfunk-codesign.cer; the private .pfx + password live in the
MSIX_CERT_PFX_B64 / MSIX_CERT_PASSWORD Actions secrets. Because it's the same cert every build,
trusting it is one-time, per machine — once imported, every future build and in-place upgrade is
trusted with no further prompt:
# once per machine (elevated): trust the publisher
Import-Certificate -FilePath .\punktfunk-codesign.cer -CertStoreLocation Cert:\LocalMachine\TrustedPeople
# then install the package for your CPU (and re-run for each upgrade — no re-trust needed)
Add-AppxPackage -Path .\punktfunk-client-windows_<ver>_x64.msix # Intel/AMD
Add-AppxPackage -Path .\punktfunk-client-windows_<ver>_arm64.msix # ARM64 (Snapdragon, etc.)
The matching .cer is also published next to each .msix in the registry, so it's always at hand.
The MSIX declares a dependency on the Windows App SDK 2.x runtime; install
the App SDK runtime if Add-AppxPackage reports a missing
Microsoft.WindowsAppRuntime.2 framework.
pack-msix.ps1 signing precedence: it uses the MSIX_CERT_PFX_B64 / MSIX_CERT_PASSWORD secrets
when present (the stable cert above), else generates an ephemeral self-signed cert (forks / local
builds without the secrets). Either way it exports the signing cert's public .cer for the import.
To move to a publicly-trusted (no-import) cert — Azure Artifact Signing or a public OV cert —
replace the two secrets with the new .pfx; the cert's subject DN must equal the manifest
Publisher, so pass a matching -Publisher (it's stamped into the package Identity, and changing
it changes the package identity → a one-time reinstall).
Building locally
On the Windows runner / dev VM (MSVC + Windows SDK present), after a release build:
# x64
cargo build --release -p punktfunk-client-windows --target x86_64-pc-windows-msvc
pwsh -File clients/windows/packaging/pack-msix.ps1 `
-Version 0.2.0.0 -TargetDir C:\t\x86_64-pc-windows-msvc\release -OutDir C:\t\msix
# arm64 (cross-compiled; point FFMPEG_DIR at the ARM64 tree)
$env:FFMPEG_DIR = 'C:\Users\Public\ffmpeg-arm64'
cargo build --release -p punktfunk-client-windows --target aarch64-pc-windows-msvc
pwsh -File clients/windows/packaging/pack-msix.ps1 `
-Version 0.2.0.0 -Arch arm64 -TargetDir C:\t\aarch64-pc-windows-msvc\release -OutDir C:\t\msix
Validated end-to-end on the build VM (pack → sign → Add-AppxPackage → framework-dependency
resolution). The only step that needs a real display is launching the WinUI window (same
on-glass constraint as the rest of the client).