diff --git a/doc/stdenv/stdenv.chapter.md b/doc/stdenv/stdenv.chapter.md index 71caddd8aa4..91e59bbce48 100644 --- a/doc/stdenv/stdenv.chapter.md +++ b/doc/stdenv/stdenv.chapter.md @@ -792,7 +792,7 @@ There’s many more kinds of arguments, they are documented in `nixpkgs/pkgs/bui ### `makeBinaryWrapper` \ \ \ {#fun-makeBinaryWrapper} -A setup-hook very similar to `makeWrapper`, only it creates a tiny _compiled_ wrapper executable, that can be used as a shebang interpreter. This is needed mostly on Darwin, where shebangs cannot point to scripts, [due to a limitation with the `execve`-syscall](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67100831/macos-shebang-with-absolute-path-not-working). The arguments it accepts are similar to those of `makeWrapper` and they are documented in `nixpkgs/pkgs/build-support/setup-hooks/make-binary-wrapper.sh`. +A setup-hook very similar to `makeWrapper`, only it creates a tiny _compiled_ wrapper executable, that can be used as a shebang interpreter. This is needed mostly on Darwin, where shebangs cannot point to scripts, [due to a limitation with the `execve`-syscall](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67100831/macos-shebang-with-absolute-path-not-working). The arguments it accepts are similar to those of `makeWrapper` and they are documented in `nixpkgs/pkgs/build-support/setup-hooks/make-binary-wrapper.sh`. Compiled wrappers generated by `makeBinaryWrapper` can be inspected with `less ` - by scrolling past the binary data you should be able to see the C code that generated the executable and there see the environment variables that were injected into the wrapper.