It has really been a long time that gnu artanis, the lovely python flask or rust rocket equivalance in guile, can not run under minimal mode here, in guix system
I consider this a bug instead of any sort of wish list because this behaviour is definitely below expectation having checked the package definition this afternoon and examined part of artanis source code for nearly a whole day, I found that there is code dealting with the config files in guix package definition > (substitute* "Makefile" ;set the root of config files to OUT > ((" /etc") (string-append " " out "/etc"))) but it does not work even though artanis derivation folder is populated with correct files then because inside artanis it is hardcoded to check "/etc/artanis/artanis.conf", one can find the definition of *default-conf-file* inside the "artanis/config.scm" file now my question is what is the best way to solve this undesired nasty behaviour? in my opinion the main fault is artanis hardcoded the default path assuming fhs as well, instead of using more flexible ways since the maintainer of artanis is a gnu constributor, I wonder if anyone would finally reach him/her/they up and adapt a better way that support the specified config folder at build/install phases or is it the guix side's responsibility to figure out some walkaround as there are a lot of packages out there assuming fhs and even hardcoding /usr/local/share -- we can't just shut the door to them right? For the former solution, it might be more appropriate for a senior contributor to chat with the contributor... For the latter solution, is it realistic to modify the phase to patch or somehow change the *default-conf-file* related stuff before actually getting the derivation? (I guess changing it to "etc/artanis.conf" would work if the derivation folder is in its loadpath, but of course just a guess anyway!) forking artanis is not desired just for this, since most folks might use art work instead of minimal mode hope for a fix or guidance about source patching "on the fly" really don't like falling back to things like > python3 -m http.server every time I need a quick api server.