Previously the nushell module did not differentiate between Linux and
Darwin when deciding where to place config files, whereas nushell
does. This commit fixes that.
The previous variant used IFD to generate the `JAVA_HOME` variable and relied on internal hooks of the `java` package, this failed for a user cross compiling their configuration.
This PR changes that and uses the `home` attribute, as documented in the very last sentence of the https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/stable/#sec-language-java chapter.
The previous version linked the file into home, then sourced that. Since
nothing else expects that file to be there, this is unnecessary.
Additionally, doing so made it impossible to test a built config without
switching, e.g. using `XDG_CONFIG_HOME=… nvim` or `nvim -u`. This
remedies that, at least for this particular reference.
To test this, change from asserting contents of the config file to
actually starting nvim, outputting sentinel values, and then asserting
their values are present. This way it’s tested that nvim loaded the
config, rather than that some config is in a specific place.
This is all in one commit as the test, as written now, would not have
worked before since the previously hard-coded home path was not an
actual file in the test environment.
* ssh: add generic Match support for matchBlocks
Introduce conservative support for actual `Match`
blocks in ssh config.
"Conservative" means this PR doesn'tt try to process
the `match` expression and simply uses it as a string
provided by the user.
If set, `match` has precedence over `host` meaning
if both are set, `match` is used and `host` is ignored.
* Add news entry
Rather than reject a configuration when this option is set, just
silently ignore it when the platform isn't darwin. The name makes it
obvious that it won't be applied outside of darwin, and this allows
people to use the same configuration between hosts without any special concern.
Co-authored-by: Nicholas Sielicki <git@opensource.nslick.com>
This commit allows imperative management of "urls" file. It can be
useful if "urls" file is treated as a secret.
With this change, it's possible to provision "urls" via Syncthing,
agenix, sops-nix or other means, while still managing Newsboat
declaratively.
Add a new Thunderbird module that uses the configuration in
`accounts.email.accounts` to setup SMTP and IMAP accounts.
Multiple profiles are not supported at this point.
Update notification popups are annoying when vscode/vscodium is
managed by Home Manager. However, as these settings also require the
configuration to be managed via `userSettings`, they are disabled by
default.
With this change, it's now possible to configure the default search
engine in Firefox with
programs.firefox.profiles.<name>.search.default
and add custom engines with
programs.firefox.profiles.<name>.search.engines.
It's also recommended to enable
programs.firefox.profiles.<name>.search.force = true
since Firefox will replace the symlink for the search configuration on
every launch, but note that you'll loose any existing configuration by
enabling this.
This will cache the output of `passwordCommand` per authentication
realm.
Context: the `credentials` key in `sbt` is a `TaskKey[Seq[Credentials]]`.
In `sbt`, tasks are evaluated on-demand and their output is not cached.
This particular key is referenced by all submodules in a project. When
the command is relatively expensive (e.g.: `pass show foo`), this
results in several seconds of delay when doing basic things like
`compile` or `test` which makes this unusable without some kind of
caching.
sbt allows overriding the default repositories to use to resolve
dependencies. This is often used with proxies and/or private
repositories to host internal packages.
This change adds a `repositories` attribute to `sbt` to allow
specifying the values that will go in `~/.sbt/repositories` file.
To support the above change we also deprecate the `baseConfigPath`
option in favour of `baseUserConfigPath` which points one level higher
by default. This allows not using relative paths to refer to the
top-level configuration directory.
Also adds tests for the new option and the deprecation of the previous
one.
At commit [5666e6b9](5666e6b9fb),
broot refactored the content of the file `/resources/default-conf.hjson`
into multiple files under the directory `/resources/default-conf`, using
[`imports`](5666e6b9fb/resources/default-conf/conf.hjson (L152-L165))
to refer to other configurations.
This refactoring is effective since version 1.14.0 of broot.
After this refactoring, in `xdg.configFile.broot` (which defaults to
`~/.config/broot`):
- we need to copy all potentially referenced files (all files under
`resources/default-conf`),
- except we need to leave out `conf.hjson` which conflicts with the
`conf.toml` generated by home-manager (because broot [accepts both conf.toml and conf.hjson](https://dystroy.org/broot/conf_file/))
To implement this, we use `symlinkJoin` to create the content of
`xdg.configFile.broot` by merging multiple sources.
* broot: use freeformType for config
* broot: use defaults from upstream
closes#2395
* broot: generate shell function
* broot: add @dermetfan to CODEOWNERS
* broot: rename `config` option to `settings`
* broot: make example more idiomatic
Co-authored-by: Nicolas Berbiche <nic.berbiche@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nicolas Berbiche <nic.berbiche@gmail.com>
We change the current logic: instead of writing an init.vim which loads
lua/init-home-manager.lua, we write an init.lua that sources init.vim
This commit also avoids writing any of these files if the plugins have
no config.
Some configuration options can take space separated strings; for
example `SSLVersions` can be configured with multiple allowed
versions.
SSLVersions TLSv1.3 TLSv1.2
This can now be represented in Home Manager.
SSLVersions = [ “TLSv1.3” “TLSv1.2” ];
In implementing this change, it uses oneOf for config type, as it is a
cleaner way to represent the union than the nested eithers
formulation.
Also add SSLVersions to test lists of strings in
`account.extraConfig`.
The `tag.gpgSign` config option was added in Git 2.23.0 and seems like
it should be set in addition to `commit.gpgSign` when
`programs.git.signing.signByDefault` is enabled
everything is now covered by other settings that are more user friendly
than this big opaque attrset.
Also 'configure' wont do anything with nixpkgs-unstable the way HM
configures neovim. so no need to keep it, the deprecation warning is > 1
year old.
This adds support for configuring email accounts, with automatic smtp, imap,
sendmail (msmpt) and maildir (mbsync, offlineimap) setup in aerc,
via `accounts.email`.
This patch follows a similar patch[1] in nixpkgs. With this patch,
fish can complete manpages for programs installed through
home-manager, e.g., using home.packages.
[1]: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/91794
bash and zsh apparently handle command substitution slightly differently
than fish. in bash/zsh:
$ export FOO=x
$ FOO=y echo $(sh -c 'echo $FOO')
x
whereas in fish:
$ export FOO=x
$ FOO=y echo $(sh -c 'echo $FOO')
y
so we have to assign $SHELL within the substitution for bash and zsh.
Per the [docs], MCFLY_FUZZY is no longer a boolean, taking now a
positive integer that controls the fuzziness factor.
[docs]: https://github.com/cantino/mcfly#fuzzy-searching
Co-authored-by: Robert Helgesson <robert@rycee.net>
mujmap is a tool that synchronizes mail between a mail server and
notmuch via JMAP. It's very similar to lieer, so I heavily based the
implementation of the notmuch module on lieer's. I did not include an
equivalent to lieer's periodic synchronization service, however,
because I plan to soon introduce a daemon mode to mujmap.
https://github.com/elizagamedev/mujmap
M_SHARE is not a valid column on Darwin. It seems that previously htop
ignored unknown columns, but the current version does not display all
subsequent columns.
Neomutt will run the given command (which can be a string or a path)
and take the output from stdout and use it as the signature for your
email.
Co-authored-by: Nicolas Berbiche <nicolas@normie.dev>
When processing `publicKeys` entries, handle entries that contain
multiple public keys (i.e. gpg --show-key returns multiple `pub`
lines) properly, setting the trust level for each key.
PR #2897
The code that is being evaled without the `--print-full-init` flag is
this:
```sh
__main() {
local major="${BASH_VERSINFO[0]}"
local minor="${BASH_VERSINFO[1]}"
if ((major > 4)) || { ((major == 4)) && ((minor >= 1)); }; then
source <(/nix/store/...-starship-1.3.0/bin/starship init bash --print-full-init)
else
source /dev/stdin <<<"$(/nix/store/...-starship-1.3.0/bin/starship init bash --print-full-init)"
fi
}
__main
unset -f __main
```
This code checks for bash version >= 4.1 , which has been released in
2009. Since this version is widely unavailable in nixpkgs, we can skip
one program invocation and directly call `starship init bash
--print-full-init`.
This is achieved by generating the Home Manager configuration
file as `~/.config/task/home-manager-taskrc`, and including that
file into ~/.config/task/taskrc.
Fixes#2360
Co-authored-by: mainrs <5113257+mainrs@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Nicolas Berbiche <nicolas@normie.dev>
It can happen in some cases that home-manager first runs before gpg
creates its homedir, and it creates it with 755 permissions which the
user then needs to change by hand.
Do this in the module instead: before linking files, make sure the
homedir exists, and if it doesn't, create it with the right permissions.
This has no effect if the user does not have any aliases defined for
any accounts.
This will also only add `--my-address=` to only accounts that are
enabled to be tracked by mu.
Note, the pubs configuration file uses ConfigObj syntax, which is
similar to the INI files syntax but with extra functionalities like
nested sections. This prevents it from using Nix's INI format
generator. Here is an example of pubs configuration that cannot be
generated using Nix's INI format generator:
[plugins]
[[git]]
manual=False
For this reason, we opted for a stringly-typed configuration since the
use of a structured `settings` option would require a custom parser.
Previously, if a process inside a foot client triggered the OOM killer,
systemd would also kill the parent unit, namely the foot server.
This is not ideal if a user has a lot of clients attached, and it's
usually not the terminal emulator's fault that a process inside it has
ended up using all the available memory.
This patch moves both home.sessionVariables and
programs.zsh.sessionVariables from .zshrc to .zshenv. Additionally,
these two kinds of session variables will not be sourced more than
once to allow user-customized ones to take effect.
Before, session variables are in .zshrc, which causes non-interactive
shells to not be able to get those variables. For example, running a
command through SSH is in a non-interactive and non-login shell, which
suffers from this. With this patch, all kinds of shells can get
session variables.
The reason why these session variables are not moved to .zprofile is
that programs started by systemd user instances are not able to get
variables defined in that file. For example, GNOME
Terminal (gnome-terminal-server.service) is one of these programs and
doesn't get variables defined in .zprofile. As a result, the shells it
starts, which are interactive and non-login, do not get those
variables.
Fixes#2445
Related NixOS/nixpkgs#33219
Related NixOS/nixpkgs#45784
This file is not formatted before and is excluded by ./format, so I don't format it.
When an hook is defined, a side effect was the creation of the
${notmuchIni.database.path}/.notmuch/ directory by home-manager. If
the Xapian database does not exist yet but this .notmuch directory
exists, Notmuch is confused and throws an error when `notmuch new` is
run (while this should create the database the first time).
This commit changes the hooks paths to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME where Notmuch
expects them (see notmuch-config(1)) instead of inside the maildir
database directory.
It also moves the configuration where Notmuch expects it, but the
$NOTMUCH_CONFIG environment variable is kept for backward
compatibility.
Plugins now accept a "type" element describing the language (viml, lua
, teal, fennel, ...) in which
they are configured.
The configuration of the different plugins is aggregated per language
and made available as a key in the attribute set `programs.neovim.generatedConfigs`
For instance if you want to configure a lua package:
```
programs.neovim.plugins = [
{
plugin = packer-nvim;
type = "lua";
config = ''
require('packer').init({
luarocks = {
python_cmd = 'python' -- Set the python command to use for running hererocks
},
})
'';
}
]
```
and you can save the generated lua config to a file via
```
xdg.configFile = {
"nvim/init.generated.lua".text = config.programs.neovim.generatedConfigs.lua;
};
```
- Add support for command line arguments, this allows arguments to be
persistently set if needed (i.e workaround hardware bugs or enabling
certain flags).
- Document setting a custom package will nullify the `commandLineArgs`
option.
- Fix `mkRemovedOption` assertion from being apply even when the
`extensions` option is unused for google chrome modules.
Watson is a CLI for tracking your time.
Two unit tests were added to validate the module behavior for an empty
configuration and the example configuration.
- The check did not account the default value of `settings.modules` to be `{}`.
The default value was changed to null.
- The `settings.modules` option is now hidden from the docs.