{ stdenv, fetchFromGitHub, buildGoModule, bash, fish, zsh }: buildGoModule rec { pname = "direnv"; version = "2.22.0"; vendorSha256 = null; src = fetchFromGitHub { owner = "direnv"; repo = "direnv"; rev = "v${version}"; sha256 = "06z85r99w0nr093fawva6sysdlrdsfjjf7asx96k1sjv56sb306m"; }; # we have no bash at the moment for windows BASH_PATH = stdenv.lib.optionalString (!stdenv.hostPlatform.isWindows) "${bash}/bin/bash"; # replace the build phase to use the GNUMakefile instead buildPhase = '' make BASH_PATH=$BASH_PATH ''; installPhase = '' make install DESTDIR=$out mkdir -p $out/share/fish/vendor_conf.d echo "eval ($out/bin/direnv hook fish)" > $out/share/fish/vendor_conf.d/direnv.fish ''; checkInputs = [ fish zsh ]; checkPhase = '' export HOME=$(mktemp -d) make test-go test-bash test-fish test-zsh ''; meta = with stdenv.lib; { description = "A shell extension that manages your environment"; longDescription = '' Once hooked into your shell direnv is looking for an .envrc file in your current directory before every prompt. If found it will load the exported environment variables from that bash script into your current environment, and unload them if the .envrc is not reachable from the current path anymore. In short, this little tool allows you to have project-specific environment variables. ''; homepage = "https://direnv.net"; license = licenses.mit; maintainers = with maintainers; [ zimbatm ]; }; }