This removes the hard-coded fallback Home Manager paths. Specifically
${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-$HOME/.config}/nixpkgs/home-manager
and
"$HOME/.nixpkgs/home-manager"
Use `@HOME_MANAGER_PATH@` if it has been provided and points to
something that exists. Warn the user if it does not point to
something.
If we have not been provided with a `@HOME_MANAGER_PATH@` that exists,
then for both hard-coded paths show a warning if something exists
where the paths are pointing.
This no longer attempts to use either of the hard-coded paths as
fallback for the Home Manager path.
Prior to this change, it was impossible to nest attrsets in
accounts.email.accounts.<name>.imapnotify.extraConfig. However,
goimapnotify's configuration is JSON-based, and the recommended
configuration has:
```
"tlsOptions": {
"rejectUnauthorized": true
},
```
This change changes the type from an attrset of str/int/bool to the
JSON type provided by nixpkg's `pkgs.formats.json`.
Previously, lines in .zshrc were added with quotes in keys
(e.g. ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES['comment']='fg=#6c6c6c'). However, zsh
considered these quotes to be part of the key, so the "comment" key
remained unchanged.
* home-cursor.nix: enable gtk module when enabling gtk config generation
The gtk configurations are not generated unless config.gtk is enabled.
This is a point of confusion because config.home.pointerCursor.gtk can essentially be disabled,
despite having it enabled.
* home-cursor.nix: Add note to gtk config generation description instead of enabling gtk module
* home-cursor.nix: Add note about applying pointerCursor configs to main submodule desc
* home-cursor.nix: Change tabs to spaces
* aerc: fix per-account extraConfig section names
The aerc configuration file `aerc.conf` can contain 10 different
sections, but only the UI section supports what the aerc manual calls
contextual configuration. This works by appending to the section heading
either `:account=name` or `:folder=bar`.
The aerc-accounts module, however, applied `mkAccountConfig` to each
section heading declared in
`config.accounts.email.accounts.<name>.aerc.extraConfig.*`. This means
home-manager will generate files with `[general:account=default]` and
the options will not be recognized by aerc.
To address this, and since it doesn't make sense for other sections to
only be under a single account's scope, an assertion has been added
to confirm that only sectons that support contextual config (i.e.,
only the UI section) is declared.
This also addresses confusions like declaring
`accounts.email.accounts.*.aerc.extraConfig.general.unsafe-accounts-conf
= true` and triggering a warning message because
`programs.aerc.extraConfig.general.unsafe-accounts-conf` was unset.
This commit also updated documentation throughout the aerc modules to
be in line with this change, and fixed minor typos/formatting therein.
Co-authored-by: Genevieve <genevieve@sunlashed.garden>
* aerc: make assertion plaintext and add test case
This commit adds a test case to check both the warning on unset
`unsafe-accounts-conf = true` when aerc accounts are configured
with Nix, and the new assertion when per-account configuration
contains unsupported subsections (i.e. general).
It also fixes minor formatting issues and typos.
As pointed out in #3291, using the XDG symlink means the agent/unit
files don’t change when the contents of the config changes, and so the
service will not be restarted.
Nushell has the option to source from the login.nu file in the case
that nushell is used as a login shell. This commit adds the login file
alongside the existing config and env files as another configuration
option.
Previously, IMAP was preferred over notmuch, even if notmuch was
configured, causing problems with setting account flavor (which
automatically sets IMAP settings). The new backend order is:
notmuch > IMAP > maildir
This also fixes the notmuch DB path being set to the wrong location.
The notmuch DB is located at the maildir base path, not in each
account's maildir.
Unison supports the same option to be given several times as a command
line argument (e.g. unison -path xxx -path yyy).
This commit adds Home Manager support for this by allowing a list of
strings to be given to services.unison.pairs.<name>.commandOptions values.
# Veuillez saisir le message de validation pour vos modifications. Les lignes
* imapnotify: expose package (and exe) options
There are multiple packages that provide an imapnotify interface. Those
packages have differently named executables. This can now be customized.
This change also means test configurations can use stub packages.
* imapnotify: use/create config in configHome
Exposing the configuration file makes testing imapnotify configurations much
easier. It also allows for golden tests in home-manager.
* imapnotify: extend with launchd agent
Now that home-manager supports launchd agents, the imapnotify service
can be configured (and enabled) for darwin. The configuration matches
that of the linux/systemd version. In particular, by not setting a
`UserName`, this runs as the user whose configuration includes the
module.
Due to the launchd `Program` implementation (it must take an absolute
path) it is not possible to use that for the program and stub the path
in tests. Instead, this uses `ProgramArguments` for the program name.
The `ThrottleInterval` is equivalent to `RestartSec`. `KeepAlive` is
equivalent to `Restart`.
The `ExitTimeOut` default is 20 seconds, but goimapnotify should not
time out — this is achieved by setting the `ExitTimeout` to 0.
* imapnotify: add launchd plist test
This only tests the generated plist (which is new), not the original
systemd implementation, nor the json config file.
(Note the lack of a newline at the end of the plist file.)
This will reduce the system closure size by about 200MB under NixOS by
sharing the glibcLocales package.
When home-manager is installed on Linux without the NixOS module, all
glibc locales are installed, as before.
Resolves: #2333
Nix interprets a path-like URI as a git repository if any of the path's
parents is a git repository. Since home-manager uses a default flake URI
of ~/.config/nixpkgs/flake.nix, if you have a git repository as your
home directory and a '*' .gitignore it leads to the following problems:
evaluating derivation 'git+file:///Users/dongcarl?dir=.config%2fnixpkgs#homeConfigurations."dongcarl".activationPackage'
The following paths are ignored by one of your .gitignore files:
.config
This is solved by explicitly specifying the `path:` URI type prefix for
the default flake URI argument.
This removes the Nix Pills reference, because they are not a good
introduction to the Nix ecosystem, but rather a thorough explanation
of many disparate things. Reading through them might give some light
bulb moments for an intermediate reader, but that does not mean that
they're good for a beginner.
I've also removed the mention of infinite recursion without source
location. That's an old meme for a problem that has been mostly
solved. Mentioning it here has two effects:
- Propagate the outdated meme.
- Make users insensitive to bad errors. Learned helplessness. That
kind of thing. What we really want is for them to report bad error
messages, so that they can be fixed. And they can be fixed; just
report them at `NixOS/nix`.
The current `lla` alias, together with the `total-size` option try to get
the size of the `..` directory, and for this has to recursively open all
sibling folders. This may be super slow if some of those siblings
contain too many files, and raise a ton of useless errors if some of
those siblings contains non-readable files.
I'm suggesting to use `-A` instead, which will skip the obvious `.` and
`..` folders.
While here, I think we could also add `llt`.
* format: improve argument handling
For now, fail if the user tries to format a specific file/directory,
or runs the formatter from within a subdirectory.
Handling these situations is slightly tricky because `find -path` is
not very flexible.
* flake: add formatter
This allows running the formatter with `nix fmt`, added in Nix 2.8.
* format: use git ls-files
This is cleaner than `find` and allows us to restrict formatting to
particular files or subdirectories.
We can't test for the whole contents of the config file because that is
out of our control and may change unexpectedly. Only check for the
settings we know should be set.