When running a socket-activated emacs service, we don't want emacs to
remove the socket file after exiting, because then subsequent
invocations of `emacsclient` won't be able to use the socket to start
emacs.service again.
Emacs 27 added Type=notify support and updated the service definition to
remove the use of `emacsclient' to kill the service. Emacs 28 changes
the `StartupWMClass' in emacsclient.desktop to `Emacsd'. Update our
emacs.service and emacsclient.desktop definitions to match upstream
changes.
When killing emacs.service, the socket is removed, and subsequently
starting the service manually results in a service without a socket.
Prevent this by adding `RefuseManualStart=true' to the service's Unit
definition.
Drop Emacs 26 support as it is no longer shipped in nixpkgs. Update the
tests to verify the following configuration scenarios:
- Emacs version: 27, 28
- Socket activation: disabled, enabled
This target is for systemd units that require a system tray to be
running.
This also fixes taffybar.service: previously, systemd would consider it
to be active (running) before it was actually ready to accept tray
icons.
This change makes the services created via the lieer module aware of the notmuch config created by the home-mangager notmuch module (which is stored in a non-standard location).
Without this change all the lieer services created by the lieer module failed for me, as they were unable to find the notmuch config.
* i3, sway: extract border functionality to common function
Converted the i3 module to use default_border and
default_floating_border and extracted that functionality out to be
shared between the i3 and sway modules.
* i3: add sumnerevans as maintainer
* add service package option
* add waylandDisplay option dunst now supports wayland, and looks for WAYLAND_DISPLAY var to use it
Co-authored-by: @li:maisiliym.uniks <@li:maisiliym.uniks>
If the configuration is `null`, the compiled configuration
`xmonadBin` should not be used and instead the WM startup command
should be set to the bare `xmonad` binary.
The `libFiles` option allows Home Manager to manage additional files
for xmonad.
Also compile xmonad during configuration build time. This avoids the
need to compile the configuration during activation.
Polybar's config format is a bit strange, and lists in particular are
annoying to handle. This enables using normal nix lists and nested
attrsets instead.
This change is not backwards-compatible, because the INI converter
converts lists of strings to space-separated values, and this does
something else. I expect that this is only relevant for the
`modules-left` etc bar setting, but that's enough to break things :(.
Not every option is exposed by redshift/gammastep parameters, for
example gamma options are only exposed in configuration file. So this
PR refactors this module to generate a configuration file and pass it
to the redshift/gammastep using -c parameter.
This is a breaking change since there is no support for some of the
older options like `extraOptions`, but unless you use `extraOptions`
it should work without changes.
Not every option is exposed by redshift/gammastep parameters, for
example gamma options are only exposed in configuration file. So this
PR refactors this module to generate a configuration file and pass it
to the redshift/gammastep using -c parameter.
This is a breaking change since there is no support for some of the
older options like `extraOptions`, but unless you use `extraOptions`
it should work without changes.
Nowadays services.{redshift,gammastep} modules are really similar. They
should, since Gammastep is a fork of Redshift with the main objective is
to support Wayland.
So instead of trying to maintain two separate modules, this commit unify
the options in lib/options.nix file, making the implementation of the
module itself ends up being really simple (just calling the common
options with the necessary parameters to differentiate between them).
When setting `...sway.package = null`, the default bar configuration
would throw an error trying to use the bar from the null package.
Logic is added to use the bar from `pkgs.sway` instead of `cfg.package`
if it is null.
Fixes#1714
I also made some modifications to the systemd service to match the [AUR version](https://aur.archlinux.org/cgit/aur.git/tree/goimapnotify@.service?h=goimapnotify) of `goimapnotify`. In particular, restarting is useful in case a network failure causes `imapnotify` to exit - that shouldn't mean that it stops trying when the network comes back up.
Using the final package in the `onChange` block broke some use cases.
This restores the old behavior and instead solves the test
dependencies in a different way.
Fixes#1611
This reverts commit 7c3c64208e.
`pgrep -x somecommand` exits with a non-zero status if it finds no
process running with the given name. When using home-manager as a
NixOS module, on boot (when sway isn't running) this script would
fail and then fail the unit since it seems the onChange scripts
are running with the -e switch.
This change ensures we're always returning a 0 exit status where we
attempt to get the pid of sway - we're only interested in either the
pid or an empty string, the exit status isn't important.
The `ExecStart=` option of systemd must take arguments fully quoted.
That is,
"-sshargs=-i somekey"
and not
-ssargs="-i somekey"
Additionally, inside arguments passed to unison, `=` characters must
be quoted. After unquotation by systemd, one must have
-sshargs=-o Foo\=4
instead of
-sshargs=-o Foo=4
When running the service start script with `DISPLAY` set, a `gi`
import error is triggered. Blanking the variable will make the script
use a different code path that does not attempt to import `gi`.
Also moves activation script up into start of script instead.
PR #1415
This option can be used to enable optional Spotifyd features, such as
looking up the Spotify password in the system keyring or enabling
MPRIS support.
PR #1390
Emacs populates 'exec-path' at launch from the 'PATH' environment
variable. Likewise, the emacs derivation from nixpkgs populates
'load-path' from the 'NIX_PROFILES' variable. As neither of these are
available by default in the systemd user manager, revert to the
previous behavior of launching the Emacs daemon from a login shell.
Fixes#1354Fixes#1340
PR #1355
Add 'services.emacs.socketActivation.enable' for generating an
'emacs.socket' systemd unit.
Emacs since version 26 has supported socket activation, whereby an
external process manager such as systemd listens on a socket and passes
it to the Emacs daemon when the manager launches it. This improves
startup time of the user session and avoids launching the daemon when not
needed, for example when launching the user session via SSH.
This implementation hard-codes the socket path to the default for the
version of 'programs.emacs.finalPackage', because systemd does not
perform shell expansion in the socket unit's 'ListenStream' parameter
and it seems like an advanced use-case to change the socket path. Shell
expansion would be desirable as the socket path usually resides in
directories such as $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR or $TMPDIR.
Tests were added to verify behavior in the following cases:
- Emacs service with socket activation disabled
- Emacs 26 with socket activation enabled
- Emacs 27 with socket activation enabled
PR #1314
Add an option to enable a .desktop file for the Emacs client.
PR #1223
Co-authored-by: Michael Lingelbach <m.j.lbach@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Helgesson <robert@rycee.net>
Nixpkgs no longer packages compton, and instead packages picom, a
(mostly) compatible fork of compton, providing an alias from compton
to picom. Because some configuration options have been changed, and
all references to "compton" have been made deprecated and replaced
with "picom", 'services.compton' has been deprecated in favor of the
new 'services.picom'.
Resolves#878
PR #1101
Add 'services.lieer', which generates systemd timer and service units
to synchronize a Gmail account with lieer. Per-account configuration
lives in 'accounts.email.accounts.<name>.lieer.sync'.
This adds a service module for [grobi](https://github.com/fd0/grobi),
which can be used to automatically configure monitors/outputs for Xorg
via RANDR.
The old method for hiding the error no longer works in NixOS 19.09,
and ends up breaking blueman-applet entirely. Enable the NixOS service
instead.
Pull request #950
On NixOS it is necessary to set `bgSupport = true` when creating a
Home Manager desktop manager session. Otherwise NixOS will add code
that sets the background, overriding the effort made by the
`random-background` module.
Fixes#955
Pull request #956
This allows specifying, for example, the music directory using path
literals without causing the directory to be copied to the Nix store.
Suggested-by: Silvan Mosberger <infinisil@icloud.com>
MPD is using syslog for its logging output, while it could directly
log to systemd's journal, as this daemon is primarily used as a
systemd user service. This change makes MPD log to standard output,
which is captured by systemd.
See https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/57608, which does the same
thing to NixOS's MPD service.
This patch started by addresssing the code review comments to close
https://github.com/rycee/home-manager/pull/290. However initiating a new
pull request it became clear, that home-manager changed significantly
since then.
This changes the initial pull request to be consistent with the email
account management in home-manager now. It also adds a simple test and support
for multiple accounts.
In particular, don't add trailing backslashes introduced by
`xautolockExtraOptions`. Systemd's unit file parser seems to have
gotten a bit stricter and with systemd 242, the trailing backslash
caused the next non-empty line to be ignored.
In that case, this was `[Section]`, so all subsequent settings were
mistakenly added to `[Service]`, causing them to be ignored entirely.
Simplify and fix this by using `concatStringsSep` to build a single
`ExecStart` line.
All default keybindings should have a default priority attached to them.
This will allow users to redefine some of the default keybindings
without using mkForce. Fixes#485.