projectFile = "src/project.sln";
nugetDeps = ./deps.json; # see "Generating and updating NuGet dependencies" section for details
buildInputs = [ referencedProject ]; # `referencedProject` must contain `nupkg` in the folder structure.
dotnet-sdk = dotnetCorePackages.sdk_8_0;
dotnet-runtime = dotnetCorePackages.runtime_8_0;
executables = [ "foo" ]; # This wraps "$out/lib/$pname/foo" to `$out/bin/foo`.
executables = [ ]; # Don't install any executables.
packNupkg = true; # This packs the project as "foo-0.1.nupkg" at `$out/share`.
runtimeDeps = [ ffmpeg ]; # This will wrap ffmpeg's library path into `LD_LIBRARY_PATH`.
}
```
Keep in mind that you can tag the [`@NixOS/dotnet`](https://github.com/orgs/nixos/teams/dotnet) team for help and code review.
## Dotnet global tools {#dotnet-global-tools}
[.NET Global tools](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/tools/global-tools) are a mechanism provided by the dotnet CLI to install .NET binaries from Nuget packages.
They can be installed either as a global tool for the entire system, or as a local tool specific to project.
The local installation is the easiest and works on NixOS in the same way as on other Linux distributions.
[See dotnet documentation](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/tools/global-tools#install-a-local-tool) to learn more.
[The global installation method](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/tools/global-tools#install-a-global-tool)
should also work most of the time. You have to remember to update the `PATH`
value to the location the tools are installed to (the CLI will inform you about it during installation) and also set
the `DOTNET_ROOT` value, so that the tool can find the .NET SDK package.
You can find the path to the SDK by running `nix eval --raw nixpkgs#dotnet-sdk` (substitute the `dotnet-sdk` package for
another if a different SDK version is needed).
This method is not recommended on NixOS, since it's not declarative and involves installing binaries not made for NixOS,
which will not always work.
The third, and preferred way, is packaging the tool into a Nix derivation.
### Packaging Dotnet global tools {#packaging-dotnet-global-tools}
Dotnet global tools are standard .NET binaries, just made available through a special
NuGet package. Therefore, they can be built and packaged like every .NET application,
using `buildDotnetModule`.
If however the source is not available or difficult to build, the
`buildDotnetGlobalTool` helper can be used, which will package the tool
straight from its NuGet package.
This helper has the same arguments as `buildDotnetModule`, with a few differences:
* `pname` and `version` are required, and will be used to find the NuGet package of the tool
* `nugetName` can be used to override the NuGet package name that will be downloaded, if it's different from `pname`
* `nugetHash` is the hash of the fetched NuGet package. `nugetSha256` is also supported, but not recommended. Set this to `lib.fakeHash` for the first build, and it will error out, giving you the proper hash. Also remember to update it during version updates (it will not error out if you just change the version while having a fetched package in `/nix/store`)