checkInputs used to be added to nativeBuildInputs. Now we have
nativeCheckInputs to do that instead. Doing this treewide change allows
to keep hashes identical to before the introduction of
nativeCheckInputs.
Adds a `bats.withLibraries (p: [ ... ])` function, which creates a
`bats` wrapper where the `BATS_LIB_PATH` environment variable contains
fallbacks for the given list of libraries.
This allows to e.g. use the `bats-assert` library (which itself requires the
`bats-support` library) with
bats.withLibraries (p: [ p.bats-support p.bats-assert ])
In a `.bats` file you can then call `bats_load_library` [1] to load the
libraries in the `setup()` function:
setup() {
bats_load_library bats-support
bats_load_library bats-assert
}
[1]: https://bats-core.readthedocs.io/en/stable/writing-tests.html?highlight=library#bats-load-library-load-system-wide-libraries
I happily painted myself into a corner when converting bats to use
resholve. Since resholve tests itself with bats, all updates to
resholve now require rebuilding bats. The build itself is quick, but
the tests take a few minutes; moving them into passthru saves time. :)
The resholve 0.8.0 release includes better support for intra-package
references, making it possible to also resholve files in lib/libexec.
This process helped shake loose 5 more unnoticed package dependencies,
and enable bats' parallel execution support.