Allow users to pass arguments to `buildDotnetModule` in the form:
```nix
buildDotnetModule (finalAttrs: {
# Args
})
```
Exposing the behaviour of the underlying `mkDerivation` and allowing
packages to be defined in a recursive way that works correctly even when
the package is overridden, e.g. using `overrideAttrs`.
Added some simple test cases that piggyback on the existing
`structured-attrs` test.
This makes the minimal change to put the script in a new file.
It does not fix the resulting ShellCheck warnings (which would
have been present in the previous version; I've just exposed
them).
This change refactors internal hooks used by buildDotnetModule to
support derivations with structured attributes. Note that this changes
variable names that the internal hooks expect.
This change fixes cross-compilation for .NET packages (that are not
using .sln as project files). See relevant comment in the change list
for more details.
In addition to that, it removes dotnet-test-sdk that appears to be
broken, that is, dotnet --list-sdks does not recognize SDKs from PATH,
and when propagated from the check hook it was shadowed by inputs from
preceding hooks.
Note that dotnet-test-sdk used to work when it was introduced in PR
144062, but PR 155257 probably overlooked this case. However, currently
it is not used in Nixpkgs and I think dotnetCorePackages.combinePackages
should cover the intended use case for dotnet-test-sdk.
There should be no reason to use env here:
1. In places where it is used to run dotnet with environment variables,
the same can be done with shell syntax.
For example, `env "FOO=$bar" baz` is equivalent to `FOO="$bar" baz`.
2. Otherwise, it just unnecessarily forces PATH lookup for dotnet
command. In addition to that, some dotnet invocations did not use
env.
This fixes:
Could not load ICU data. UErrorCode: 2
We're using a hook instead of a wrapper because various things like to
reference the unwrapped dotnet executable.
- It's useless. The correct attribute name would be `license` and not
`licenses`. Meaning setting this never did anything useful.
- It used IFD in its implementation, meaning to know what the licenses
of a nuget source are, you first had to build that nuget source. This
defeats the point of having license checks in the first place.
- IFD is not allowed by the nixpkgs CI and build farm anyway.