While attempting to reproducibly build the qml android apk, one of the differences
was due to the "frozenlist" dependency (pulled in by aiohttp) - the compiled C parts
were not deterministic. By setting this env var, we can opt-out [0] of all the C
accelerated parts and just use the pure-python implementation. We are already doing
the same for other aiohttp-related packages anyway.
[0]: c2794cac12/setup.py (L7)
maybe fixes https://github.com/spesmilo/electrum/issues/7640
Looks like by default pip is ignoring the locally available setuptools and wheel,
and downloading the latest ones from the internet at build time...
https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/reference/build-system/pyproject-toml/?highlight=no-build-isolation#disabling-build-isolationhttps://stackoverflow.com/a/62889268
> When making build requirements available, pip does so in an isolated environment. That is, pip does not install those requirements into the user’s site-packages, but rather installs them in a temporary directory which it adds to the user’s sys.path for the duration of the build. This ensures that build requirements are handled independently of the user’s runtime environment. For example, a project that needs a recent version of setuptools to build can still be installed, even if the user has an older version installed (and without silently replacing that version).
>
> In certain cases, projects (or redistributors) may have workflows that explicitly manage the build environment. For such workflows, build isolation can be problematic. If this is the case, pip provides a --no-build-isolation flag to disable build isolation. Users supplying this flag are responsible for ensuring the build environment is managed appropriately (including ensuring that all required build dependencies are installed).
If only it were that easy!
If we add the "--no-build-isolation" flag, it becomes our responsibility to install *all* build time deps,
hence we now have "requirements-build-makepackages.txt".