These shouldn't respond to targetPlatform, but previously did. The
reason is somewhat complex: they would rely on the sources of gcc and
binutils, respectively, which *do* depend on the target platform.
Obviously the source is the same in all cases, but when those packages
are no longer preserved from bootstrapping stages their `src` attributes
use a different fetchurl resulting in a changed hash.
Workaround for building "from" the bfd directory but needing
to update files a level above.
This needs to be done *after* autoreconf since autoreconf
will replace these itself, apparently.
On most distros, these are just built and distributed as part of
binutils. We don't use binutils across the board, however, but rather
switch between binutils and a cctools-binutils mashup, and change the
outputs on binutils too. This creates a combinatorial conditional soup
which is hard to maintain.
My hope is to lower the the state space. While my patch isn't the most
maintainable, they make downstream packages become more maintainable to
compensate. The additional derivations themselves are completely
platform-agnostic, always they always supports all possible target
platforms, and always yield "out" and "dev" outputs. That, in turn,
allows downstream packages to not worry about a dependency
shape-shifting under them.
In fact, the actual binutils package can avoid needing multiple outputs
now that these serve the requisite libraries, so that also can become
simpler on all platforms, too, removing the original wart this PR
circumnavigates for now. Actually changing the binutils package to
leverage is a mass rebuild, however, so I'll leave that for a separate
PR.
I do hope to upstream something like my patch too, but until then I'll
make myself maintainer of these derivations