Barflare lives in your menu bar. It finds local servers — including Conductor dev servers — and flares them to a public URL in one click.
7-day free trial starts the moment you install — no card.
Drag to Applications. Barflare lives in your menu bar — no dock, no window.
Detects every local web server and labels it by type — Conductor workspaces included. No config files.
Click flare. Get a public HTTPS URL backed by Cloudflare. Share, test, demo.
Finds every local web server and labels it — Next, Vite, Rails, and more — so you know what each port is.
Spots conductor.build workspaces specifically and tags them, so they never get lost in the list.
See Cloudflare tunnels running on your other machines, not just the one in front of you.
Servers reachable on your tailnet show up too — flare and manage their tunnels remotely.
No tunnel.yaml. No CLI flags. No DNS records to babysit.
Pin a slug per project. Same link every time you flare.
Barflare detects dev servers spun up by conductor.build the moment they boot — listed alongside your local ones. Flare any of them with the same one click. Useful for previewing agent-built UI for a teammate.
Yes — Barflare uses Cloudflare Tunnels under the hood. Free Cloudflare accounts work fine. Sign in once and Barflare handles everything else.
Yes. Point a domain at Cloudflare, pick it in Barflare, and tunnels resolve at subdomains of your choosing. The default barflare.dev domain works without setup.
Barflare watches for dev servers spawned by conductor.build running on your machine and lists them next to your other local servers. The same flare button works for both.
If Tailscale is installed and Barflare detects your tailnet, you can open the menu bar UI from any device on the tailnet and flare/unflare tunnels remotely. Useful when your laptop is closed in another room.
One Mac, one license seat. A single £15 purchase covers 3 devices — your laptop, your desktop, and a spare. Move seats freely between machines from the portal.
No. Full functionality for 7 days, no credit card. After that, an unlicensed Barflare keeps detecting ports but won't flare new tunnels.