Starting with state version 22.11 we completely reset the PATH
variable in the activation script. This is to avoid impurities and
unexpected results if the activation script accidentally uses a
command found in the user's PATH.
* 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.
`modulesPath` is usually used with antiquotation
(`"${modulesPath}/some-module.nix"`). Since antiquoted paths are copied
to the Nix store, one must explicitly do `"${toString
modulesPath}/some-module.nix"` to avoid that. Ideally `modulesPath`
should be a string to avoid this. Note that `modulesPath` is already
defined as a string in <home-manager>/modules/default.nix and
<nixpkgs>/nixos/lib/eval-config.nix.
As discussed in this issue:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/140879
`types.anything` was never meant to be used for arbitrary modules.
Co-authored-by: Silvan Mosberger <github@infinisil.com>
Having either argument defined based on the OS is a problem when
trying to write generic Nix code.
The current workaround is to use accept both and specify a default
value for each argument:
```
{ config, lib, nixosConfig ? {}, darwinConfig ? {}, ... }:
let
osConfig = nixosConfig // darwinConfig;
in
{
# Do something with `osConfig`
}
```
With this commit, it becomes possible to do the following:
```
{ config, lib, osConfig, ... }:
{
# Do something with `osConfig`
}
```
If the user has a running systemd session, source their environment
from the systemd manager and export a few variables in order to allow
activation scripts to reload applications on the fly.
The list of variables to export is arbitrary and could be extended in
the future.
Fixes#1399, fixes#2112.
One of the things managed by the `home-manager-<username>` unit is the systemd
user directory `.config/systemd/user`. However, this directory needs to be in
place completely before systemd user sessions start up or the user sessions will
come up with an incomplete listing of enabled units, etc.
There was a race condition where nothing prevented
`systemd-user-sessions.service` from starting ahead of the systemd user
directory's initialization completing. This commit makes
`home-manager-<username>` finishes _before_ we start
`systemd-user-sessions.service` to avoid such race condition.
This issue was probably not all that noticeable in most cases, but when using a
non-persistent root config (i.e. tmp on / or
https://grahamc.com/blog/erase-your-darlings) the race condition triggering
causes all kinds of issues on each reboot.
functionTo tries to evaluate functions too quickly and prevents modules
from accessing pkgs argument. fixes#1878.
Co-authored-by: Pacman99 <pachum99@gmail.com>
This allows users of the nixos and nix-darwin module to set shared modules
for all users and extra specialArgs to be available to home-manager modules.
The latter is named extraSpecialArgs just like the argument to
modules/default.nix.
This could be confusing since the the two are independent in code,
but they do mean the same thing so I think the name fits.
Darwin can now refer to the global system configuration if used as a module
through the special `darwinConfig` argument.
Co-authored-by: Nicolas Berbiche <nicolas@normie.dev>
Before the profile directory value would point directly to the build
output in the Nix store. Unfortunately this would cause an infinite
loop if the user's configuration directly or indirectly refers to the
profile directory value.
Fixes#1188
It is insufficient to install the packages in `home.packages`, it has
to be `home.path`, which includes configured extra package outputs or
profile commands.
This change makes use of the `extend` function inside `lib` to inject
a new `hm` field containing the Home Manager library functions. This
simplifies use of the Home Manager library in the modules and reduces
the risk of accidental infinite recursion.
PR #994
When using the NixOS module we cannot guarantee that the Nix store
will be writable during startup. Installing the user packages through
`nix-env -i` will fail in these cases.
This commit adds a NixOS option `home-manager.useUserPackages` that,
when enabled, installs user packages through the NixOS
users.users.<name?>.packages
option.
Note, when submodule support and external package install is enabled
then the installed packages are not available in `~/.nix-profile`. We
therefore set `home.profileDirectory` directly to the HM profile
packages.
This removes the `nixosSubmodule` option in favor of a new option
`submoduleSupport.enable`. This name better indicates that the
submodule mode applies to both NixOS and nix-darwin.
This is a NixOS module that is intended to be imported into a NixOS
system configuration. It allows the system users to be set up directly
from the system configuration.
The actual profile switch is performed by a oneshot systemd unit per
configured user that acts much like the regular `home-manager switch`
command.
With this implementation, the NixOS module does not work properly with
the `nixos-rebuild build-vm` command. This can be solved by using the
`users.users.<name?>.packages` option to install packages but this
does not work flawlessly with certain Nixpkgs packages. In particular,
for programs using the Qt libraries.