* Add flake.lock and clean up flake.nix
Add a lockfile to work around https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/6541
(and because it's a good idea anyway).
Also use flake-utils, and restrict ourselves to the five platforms
supported by nixpkgs. Otherwise, the IFD for nmd fails on weird
platforms. This fixes `nix flake check`.
Remove the redundant `apps` output, see https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/pull/2442#issuecomment-1133670487
* nixos,nix-darwin: factor out into a common module
* nixos,nix-darwin: make `home-managers.users` shallowly visible
Make sure the option is included in the NixOS/nix-darwin manual (but the
HM submodule options aren't).
Also add a static description to the HM submodule type so that we don't need to
evaluate the submodules just to build the option manual. This makes
nixos-search able to index the home-manager flake.
Also clean up some TODOs.
* flake: add nmd and nmt
This avoids having to use `pkgs.fetchFromGitLab` in an IFD, which causes
issues when indexing packages with nixos-search because `pkgs` is
instantiated with every platform.
The `getmail` package will soon be removed from nixpkgs. The
`nixos-unstable` channel already has it removed and using the service
will result in:
error: getmail has been removed from nixpkgs, migrate to getmail6
Upgrade to the getmail6 package which is already available and backwards
compatible.
M_SHARE is not a valid column on Darwin. It seems that previously htop
ignored unknown columns, but the current version does not display all
subsequent columns.
This is adapted from the `services.mopidy` NixOS module. The
difference is the setting can be configured with Nix language, taking
advantage of generators from nixpkgs. The module is also suited more
for user-specific configuration, removing the `extraConfigFiles` and
`dataDir` option.
- Change the example value of `gtk.theme.package` from
`pkgs.gnome.gnome_themes_standard` was an alias that was removed on 2022-01-13,
`pkgs.gnome-themes-extra`, which references the actual package.
- Change the example value of `gtk.icon.package` from `pkgs.adwaita-icon-theme` to
`pkgs.gnome.adwaita-icon-theme`, as this package is in the `gnome` package set.
* home.pointerCursor: init
The current architecture for cursor configurations is composed of individual
options for different backends. For example, X specific settings are managed under
`xsession.pointerCursor` and gtk specific settings are managed under `gtk.cursorTheme`.
While this architecture is modular, it causes duplication of similar structures for
each component. In theory, this provides flexibility because the components are independent
of each other which can be arranged in arbitrary ways to achieve the desired result.
However in practice, users wish to have one cursor theme applied to their entire system
The duplication of options correspond to duplication of settings on the user side and it
becomes a burden to keep track of all necessary settings.
This commit is an attempt to unify cursor configurations for different window systems and
GUI toolkits based on https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/pull/2481#issuecomment-978917480.
`home.pointerCursor` is introduced as the interface for all cursor configurations.
It contain all options relevant to cursor themes with eneral options delcared under `home.pointerCursor.*`
and backend specific options declared under `home.pointerCursor.<backend>.*`. By default, a backend
independent configuration is generated. Backend specific configurations can be toggled via the
`home.pointerCursor.<backend>.enable` option for each backend. This was decided over using a
list of enums because it allows easy access to the state of the backend. Note generating different
cursor configurations for different backends is still possible by defining only `home.pointerCursor`
and managing the respective options manually.
* xcursor: migrate options to home.pointerCursor
- Removed `xession.pointerCursor` as x11 cursor configurations are now handled in `home.pointerCursor.x11`.
- Updated `meta.maintainer` field in `home.pointerCursor` and CODEOWNERS.
This module adds basic support for configuration specializations.
These allow the user to build multiple alternative configurations that
should be part of the same generation.
In esoteric setups, automatically setting GPG_TTY to current tty is not
desired on every shell startup. This change adds configuration options
to allow user to disable that if desired.
Neomutt will run the given command (which can be a string or a path)
and take the output from stdout and use it as the signature for your
email.
Co-authored-by: Nicolas Berbiche <nicolas@normie.dev>
Without this the journal will be filled by
xscreensaver[468297]: sh: line 1: xscreensaver-command: command not found
xscreensaver-systemd: 12:29:22: exec: "xscreensaver-command -quiet -deactivate" exited with status 127
Currently translated at 12.5% (4 of 32 strings)
Add translation using Weblate (Persian)
Co-authored-by: Artin Mobasher <mobasherartin.icm@gmail.com>
Translate-URL: https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/home-manager/cli/fa/
Translation: Home Manager/Home Manager CLI
Constrain the pgrep command to only return results for the current user.
Additionally, quote the socket variables to prevent splitting.
Previously, if multiple users on a system were running `sway`, the
`pgrep` used in finding `swaySocket` would return multiple results. As a
result, reloads of sway would fail.
Fixes#2912.
This commit appends system-wide icon and pixmap directory and the icon
directory in the home-manager profile to the XCURSOR_PATH session variable
for the generic linux target. This is necessary because the default prefix
for libXcursor resolves to the Nix store which excludes the aforementioned
directories from being searched for cursor themes. [1]
[1] - https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/pull/2891#issuecomment-1101064521.
This convenience function allows automatic assignment of a package's
associations to `xdg.mimeApps.defaultApplications`.
For example,
xdg.mimeApps.defaultApplications =
config.lib.xdg.mimeAssociations [ pkgs.gnome.evince ];
Co-authored-by: Ryan Trinkle <ryan@trinkle.org>