* Using substitutions for build hooks is a great way to ensure the
necessary utility is present without making the caller supply it to
the builder, except it makes things confusing when applying overrides
* For example, the `installFromCargoBuildLog` hook was inadvertently
ignoring any `cargo` overrides applied to the entire `lib`
instantiation
* By removing all explicit substations we also side step the issue of
trying to select the correct build/host/target version of the tool and
use whatever is present in the build environment
This is done to avoid breaking builds by including puts happen to have
setup-hooks which try to claim the configure phase (such as `cmake`).
The old behavior can be brought back by setting `configurePhase = null;`
on the derivation.
* Similarly rename `installCargoTargetDirHook` to
`installCargoArtifactsHook`
* The intention is to highlight that "install" implies "copy to output"
and not anywhere else
* Also avoids the potential confusion of "cargo target dir" (location of
cargo's artifacts) with "cargo target" (which is the target
architecture/platform we want cargo to build for)
* By default we pass everything through to the actual derivation itself,
but some internal parameters don't show up as environment variables
directly (or rather do not need to)
* In an effort to keep the build environment as lean as possible, we can
do some clean up (e.g. to avoid invalidating builds if some parameter
changes but is completely ignored/overridden elsewhere)
* This hook was never a great implementation to begin with since it
would simply search the cargo artifacts directory for binaries and
libraries to install
* This isn't really great since if we have multiple builds (say one with
debug artifacts, one with release artifacts) it isn't exactly clear
which artifacts would get installed (or which will get clobbered).
* Now that we have installFromCargoBuildLogHook we can simplify the
options a bit and only have one main installation method. The caller
can always provide their own if they wish
* The intention here is to split up different "responsibilities" into
smaller parts which can be composed as a DAG rather than mutually
recursive functions. Specifically:
* `mkCargoDerivation` represents a lower-level thin wrapper around
`stdenv.mkDerivation` which will
- set up hooks
- require the caller to define the variables needed by the hooks (like
vendor dir, or artifacts to inherit)
- ensure that build/check/install phases can be configured by the
caller without having them remember to call pre/post hooks
* This allows `buildDepsOnly` to only focus on setting some default
values (like good default commands to build all artifacts, setting the
derivation name, etc.) and delegating the rest to `mkCargoDerivation`
* Lastly, the responsibility of `buildWithCargo` ends up ensuring that
`cargoArtifacts` and `cargoVendorDir` are defined if the caller does
not pass them in