It fetches its Dart dependencies automatically through `pub2nix`, and (through a series of hooks) builds and installs the executables specified in the pubspec file. The hooks can be used in other derivations, if needed. The phases can also be overridden to do something different from installing binaries.
Alternatively, `autoPubspecLock` can be used instead, and set to a path to a regular `pubspec.lock` file. This relies on import-from-derivation, and is not permitted in Nixpkgs, but can be useful at other times.
::: {.warning}
When using `autoPubspecLock` with a local source directory, make sure to use a
concatenation operator (e.g. `autoPubspecLock = ${src} + "/pubspec.lock";`), and
not string interpolation.
String interpolation will copy your entire source directory to the Nix store and
use its store path, meaning that unrelated changes to your source tree will
cause the generated `pubspec.lock` derivation to rebuild!
If the package has Git package dependencies, the hashes must be provided in the `gitHashes` set. If a hash is missing, an error message prompting you to add it will be shown.
The `dart` commands run can be overridden through `pubGetScript` and `dartCompileCommand`, you can also add flags using `dartCompileFlags` or `dartJitFlags`.
Dart supports multiple [outputs types](https://dart.dev/tools/dart-compile#types-of-output), you can choose between them using `dartOutputType` (defaults to `exe`). If you want to override the binaries path or the source path they come from, you can use `dartEntryPoints`. Outputs that require a runtime will automatically be wrapped with the relevant runtime (`dartaotruntime` for `aot-snapshot`, `dart run` for `jit-snapshot` and `kernel`, `node` for `js`), this can be overridden through `dartRuntimeCommand`.
Some Dart packages require patches or build environment changes. Package derivations can be customised with the `customSourceBuilders` argument.
A collection of such customisations can be found in Nixpkgs, in the `development/compilers/dart/package-source-builders` directory.
This allows fixes for packages to be shared between all applications that use them. It is strongly recommended to add to this collection instead of including fixes in your application derivation itself.