Assigning to `programs.neovim.extraLuaPackages` a function taking a lua package set as input
and returning a list of packages, as described in the documentation,
threw an error because the rest of the code assumed that the value was always a plain list.
Using `lib.types.coercedTo`, we can accept such functions, as per the documentation,
as well as plain lists, which we then convert to a function ignoring its input argument.
We print a warning when a plain list is assigned, since the function
form is preferred, as it ensures that the right lua package set is used.
For the lua packages, we also get the lua package set from the
finalPackage, to make sure that we are always using the same package set
as the actual unwrapped neovim package being built.
For `programs.neovim.extraPythonPackages` I did the same.
I updated the test case so that we test both ways of setting these options.
This enables nushell integration by default for direnv, similar to
bash/zsh/fish. The slightly verbose way of setting this is to ensure
that peoples' existing nushell configuration isn't overwritten, only
appended to, as would be the case if we just used the integration
example from the nushell docs:
https://www.nushell.sh/cookbook/direnv.htmlCloses#3520
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.
Currently, dot directories and XDG base directories are used
inconsistently in the Home Manager option declarations. This creates
ambiguity for the user as to where the location of the file should be
albeit this is rarely encountered in practice as it is sufficient to
read upstream documentation. The rationale is to make declarations
consistent and make a clear distinction between hardcoded and modular
specifications.
References to ~/.config in relevant nixpkgs modules were untouched as
the location is hardcoded upstream[1]. Furthermore, modules of
programs which do not follow XDG specifications were also untouched.
Generalization of tilde(~) expansions to $HOME were also considered,
however there isn't sufficient rationale despite the use of $HOME
being more universal. The expansion is standardized in POSIX[2] and is
essentially portable across all shells, thus there is no pragmatic
value to introducing the change.
[1] https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs/blob/master/pkgs/top-level/impure.nix
[2] https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/utilities/xcu_chap02.html#tag_02_06_01
Previously, home-manager would not create a user.js for a certain
profile if profile.bookmarks was not empty but
profile.settings was empty and profile.extraConfig was an
empty string.
The `style` option now also accepts a path instead of a text
configuration.
Keeping up with new Waybar options is annoying, so make the module a
freeform module.
The `modules` option will be removed in release 22.05.
The logic to generate warnings for modules and everything was
removed. I don't want to maintain the code that generates these
warnings anymore.
Since Rofi 1.7.1 (specifically davatorium/rofi@0e70d8a), the deprecated
`theme` option in the `configuration` section no longer works. For 1.7.0
and up, `@theme "name"` is supposed to be used *after* the
`configuration` block.
Nixpkgs switched to OfflineIMAP version 8 which means that Python 3 is
now used instead of Python 2. As a result, get_pass() now returns a
byte array instead of a string and the argument to get_pass() must be
a byte array too. See
https://github.com/OfflineIMAP/offlineimap3/issues/103.
Add an option to set custom `$ZPLUG_HOME`. Changing it with
`home.sessionVariables` doesnt work, since it has to be exported
before Zplug is initialised
nnn is a terminal file manager.
It is configured mostly using environment variables, so the way I
found it to avoid needing to write either shell specific code or
using `home.sessionVariables` (that would need to make the user
relogin at every configuration change) is to wrap the program using
`wrapProgram`.
This is to better integrate with more advanced shell history managers
like McFly and Atuin. By initializing fzf first, we allow the history
managers to steal the C-r key binding from fzf.
This commit adds a module for configuring atuin, a replacement shell
history program.
The module adds options for generating atuin's `config.toml` from Nix,
and options to enable atuin's integration for bash and zsh
(which will rebind history keys to open the atuin history).
Bottom is a cross-platform graphical process/system monitor with a
customizable interface and a multitude of features.
Two unit tests were added validate the module behavior for an empty
configuration and the example configuration.
At the moment, only the inbox of each mail account is added to neomutt.
This inbox is always called "Inbox", so if you configure multiple
accounts, it is hard to know which one is which.
This change allows the user to specify a display name per account that
uses `named-mailboxes` under the hood.
Additionally this change now allows to add other folders than the inbox,
for example the Trash, Spam or Drafts folders to be added on a per-account
basis. Using extraOptions is not possible here, as those are lazily
loaded on mailbox open and thus would appear at the bottom and not sorted
by account.
This commit also changes the default sidebar format string to use %D
instead of %B because %B will ignore named mailboxes and show the folder
name instead.
When the 'fields' setting is not set in htoprc, the htop program won't read any
of the settings. Provide a default value for fields in case it's not explicitly
set by the user.
Expose the generated viml config, this has 2 advantages:
1/ user can choose to write the generated config to a file of its choice
2/ the user can prepend/append to the config before writing it
xdg.configFile."nvim/init.vim".text = ''
" prepend some config
${programs.neovim.generatedConfigViml}
" append some config
'';
NOTE: this was already possible with
xdg.configFile."nvim/init.vim" = mkMerge [
(mkBefore {
text = ''
" prepend some config
'';
})
(mkAfter {
text = ''
" append some config
'';
})
]
This adds two new options: 'programs.neovim.coc.{enable,settings}`.
These settings offer a simple interface over `xdg.configFile."nvim/coc-settings.json`,
using the standard Nix' syntax instead of a multiline string.
With
programs.taskwarrior.dataLocation = /absolute/path
(outside of $HOME) the current implementation wrongly creates
$HOME/absolute/path (due to how home.file is implemented).
Since taskwarrior creates the dataLocation automatically on first run,
there is actually no need for HM to create that directory.
Additional benefit, the .keep symlink that HM creates as a side-effect
no longer appears in the taskwarrior data directory.
Fixes#2207.
Before, loading a module would be guarded by an optional platform
condition. This made it possible to avoid loading and evaluating a
module if it did not support the host platform.
Unfortunately, this made it impossible to share a single configuration
between GNU/Linux and Darwin hosts, which some wish to do.
This removes the conditional load and instead inserts host platform
assertions in the modules that are platform specific.
Fixes#1906
* rofi: add support to plugins
* rofi: update package example
Co-authored-by: Sumner Evans <me@sumnerevans.com>
* rofi: Format package example
* rofi: Fix tests
Rofi will not try to install plugins using override when tests overlay
actual rofi package with empty scirpt
* rofi: Refactor
Co-authored-by: Sumner Evans <me@sumnerevans.com>
The packaging in nixpkgs for obs plugins has changed and there's a
wrapOBS function.
The name of the plugins has also changed so the example needed updating
to reflect that.
Related: https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/125308
- Add support for showing bold as bright colors
- Add support to configure the background transparency
- Fix the scrollOnOutput, it was not being dumped to the config
- Add tests!
- Add myself as maintainer
NixOS/nixpkgs@03310df843 disabled flake
support by default, so we now need to build a custom package and use it
if the user wants to `use flake` successfully. This should fix#2087.
* irssi: add ssl_cert option for servers
I was following these instructions
https://www.oftc.net/NickServ/CertFP/
and found that the `/server add -ssl_cert` option was needed.
This patch therefore adds an optional
`programs.irssi.networks.<name>.server.ssl.certificateFile` path.
Perhaps this could also be done with a `settings` attribute, but that
would probably require most of this module to be reworked.
* irsii: Add example-settings test case
`rbw` is a stand-alone Bitwarden client, which makes use of a daemon to
cache your password and manage state.
Its configuration can be managed by `home-manager` or not, leaving the
user free to configure it through `rbw config`.
Pass meters for formatting in a list of attrsets so that ordering can be
preserved. In addition provide some mode-specific functions to create these
attrsets, to make for a bit nicer config.
This fixes#2060.
* isync/mbsync: replace master/slave with far/near
isync/mbsync: update tests to match new changes
* isync/mbsync: use mkRenamedOptionModule to alert user to near/far change
* isync/mbsync: use warnings to alert about master/slave far/near change
Fix capitalization
isync/mbsync: fix nitpicks
* isync/mbsync: run format script
* isync/mbsync: include new test for expected master/slave warnings
* isync/mbsync: add news about changes
Previous patch on deprecation warnings broke use of old options due to function
call with too many arguments. This fixes the arguments so deprecation warnings
are properly traced while preserving old configuration options.
* htop: add some missing meters
* htop: replace individual options with 'settings'
Deprecate all options and introduce `settings` for setting htop configuration
values in Nix configuration.
Use `lib.htop` to provide `fields` and `modes` for easy access to htop's integer
configuration. And `leftMeters` and `rightMeters` functions for building the
separate `*_meters` and `*_meter_modes` attributes.
* htop: add release-notes 21.05 entry
* htop: improve deprecation warnings
Move default configuration into `settings` and make deprecated options default
to `null`. Print deprecation warnings for any option that is non-null --
i.e. only show warnings for explicitly specified deprecated options.
* htop: make self code owner of module
* release notes: fix invalid programs.htop xref
Foot is a fast terminal emulator for Wayland. It can optionally be run
in a client-server configuration.
There are three unit tests to handle an empty configuration, the
default configuration, and systemd service file generation.
`nix-index` is a tool to quickly locate the package providing a certain
file in `nixpkgs`. It indexes built derivations found in binary caches.
This module adds the shell integration for its `command-not-found`
script for interactive shells.
* ncspot: add module
ncspot is a ncurses Spotify client written in Rust using librespot.
* news: fix bad github ui merge
Co-authored-by: Nicolas Berbiche <nicolas@normie.dev>
Attempting to build a flake configuration using `ssh.remoteForwards' results in
evaluation errors when `port' is undefined, as `!(entry ? port)' evaluates to
false. This was verified in the nix repl, and also occurs for `nix flake
check'.
Set optional attrs in `bindOptions' and `forwardModule' to `null' by default
and adjust the assertion to check for `null' instead of attr definitions.
* Git: Make signing key id be optional
Thus by default the signing key is selected by commit’s author.
* Git: Add tests for config with and without signing key id
* Git: Format tests for signing key
* Git: Remove default value (null) for signing key
* Git: Update description for signing key
* neomutt: support list in binds.map
Closes#1245
Adds support for specifying programs.neomutt.binds[].map as a list. If
specified as a list, then the binds will be concatenated with a ",".
* neomutt: add deprecation warning for (binds|macros).map as string
Added note that specifying 'programs.neomutt.(binds|macros).map' as a string is deprecated. Instead, use the list form.
* neomutt: note deprecation warning in release notes
Added note that specifying 'programs.neomutt.(binds|macros).map' as a
single string is deprecated in favor of specifying it as a list
* neomutt: add assertion that map is not empty
Added an assertion that each 'programs.neomutt.(binds|macros).map' list contains at least one element.
Resolves#1843. Allows aliases to be expanded in initExtra, and adds a
visible bashrcExtra option for commands that should be run in ~/.bashrc
even by non-interactive shells.
* neomutt: Fix eval error when primary account not enabled
If neomutt is enabled for an account, but not the primary account, the
configuration will fail with "list index 0 is out of bounds".
This adds the first neomutt-enabled account as a fallback.
* neomutt: add regression test/update tests
Fixed the breakage for prezto introduced in #1778.
The previous method created issues where certain configuration files would get
replaced by prezto's variants instead of being merged as before. This led to
issues like no config being loaded if `home.zsh.dotDir` was set.
The old method of loading these files has been restored. This fixes the issue.
When installing plugins, Home Manager expects plugins (packages) to have
a `pname` attribute.
This is not always the case, so fallback to `name` if `pname` is unset.
This allows me to use offlineimap with passwordstore. I guess nobody
uses a newline in their password?
Co-authored-by: Kerstin Humm <kerstin@erictapen.name>
Set the systemd user service to use "mixed" killmode, which lets waybar
stop its module scripts. This fixes issues where waybar blocks shutdown
until systemd sends a SIGKILL to waybar child processes.
The mailboxes must be a tuple of string or the string "ALL".
The generated value was broken if the mailboxes configuration was a list
of only one string (but not "ALL"): the generated expression ( "str" )
was not a tuple but a string.
Now, we always generate a tuple (by adding a comma, even with a list of
size one). Getmail works with the special value "ALL" whether it is a
in tuple or not, so this case is not specifically handled.
If a user using msmtp to send all their email, it would be preferred if
git used it as well.
The only settings necessary are to set the smtp server to the msmtp
binary and set envelop sender to true, which makes git call msmtp with
the -f flag to set the from address from the email.
Alot uses the first email in the config as primary email. Because the
order in which the email.accounts were sorted was alphabetical, the account
set to `primary = true` was not put first in the alot config and thus
not considered as primary email for alot.
This was fixed by sorting the email accounts again such that accounts
with `primary = true` come first.
The environment variable FZF_CTRL_R_COMMAND has never existed
and been support by fzf according to
`git grep FZF_CTRL_R_COMMAND $(git rev-list --all)` and
`git log -G FZF_CTRL_R_COMMAND`.
The `configure` option is not type checked and an artifact of how
nixpkgs is implemented.
We now have the equivalent options in home-manager and managing
interactions between the 2 systems complexifies maintainance of the
module.
Please use the other options at your disposal:
configure.packages.*.opt -> programs.neovim.plugins = [ { plugin = ...; optional = true; }]
configure.packages.*.start -> programs.neovim.plugins = [ { plugin = ...; }]
configure.customRC -> programs.neovim.extraConfig
The bash module always assigns a value to HISTFILE in the bashrc, even
when no value is explicitly set. This makes it impossible to tell bash
to use a different HISTFILE by setting the HISTFILE environment variable
HISTFILE=/tmp/bash_history bash
This changes the default value of programs.bash.historyFile to null, and
only writes the HISTFILE=... line to the bashrc if it is changed to
something else.
It was removed in nixpkgs and causes an error on rebuilds.
error: Your configuration mentions firefox.enableAdobeFlash. All plugin related options have been removed, since Firefox from version 52 onwards no longer supports npapi plugins (see https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/npapi-plugins).
* zsh: update prezto path structure
The path structure was changed in Nixpkgs and this commit updates
the module to match.
Fixes#1773
* zsh-prezto: fix tests, small tidyup
Co-authored-by: Nick Hu <me@nickhu.co.uk>
The `SubFolders` option in mbsync controls the folder naming style in
the maildir. There are three different styles:
* Verbatim - <maildirPath>/top/sub/subsub
* Maildir++ - <inboxPath>/.top.sub.subsub (used by Dovecot)
* Legacy - <maildirPath>/top/.sub/.subsub
Previously, the `SubFolders` option was hardcoded to `Verbatim`. This
change allows configuration of the `SubFolders` option.
If this commit now it is possible to define a custom theme directly
using Nix, like this:
```nix
{
programs.rofi.theme = {
"*" = {
background-color = "#000000";
border-color = "FFFFFF";
width = 512;
};
listview = {
cycle = true;
};
};
}
```
And this will be converted to the proper rasi format to be used in
rofi.
* rofi: migrate to rasi configuration format
The Xresources configuration format is deprecated in Rofi. For example,
using Rofi from unstable (1.6.1 as of now) you get the following
warnings when starting the application:
```
(process:9272): Rofi-WARNING **: 01:38:48.596: The old Xresources based configuration format is deprecated.
(process:9272): Rofi-WARNING **: 01:38:48.596: Please upgrade: rofi -upgrade-config.
``````
So this commit migrates it for its new configuration format, called rasi
instead.
This new implementation uses attrsets manipulation instead of using
strings, making the code clearer and also fixing some bugs found during
the way. To make sure everything is right, I also created some tests.
If someone wants to validate if the generated config is correct, just
run in terminal:
```
$ rofi -dump-config
```
And rofi will dump the current configuration file, including all
unsetted options.
* docs: document programs.rofi.extraConfig changes
* rofi: add thiagokokada as maintainer
* rofi: add toRasi function
Closes issue #1725.
This allows mpv module to be customized with support for more advanced
features than the `programs.mpv.scripts` current support. For example,
with this change now this is possible:
```nix
{
programs.mpv.package = (pkgs.wrapMpv (pkgs.mpv-unwrapped.override {
vapoursynthSupport = true;
}) {
extraMakeWrapperArgs = [
"--prefix" "LD_LIBRARY_PATH" ":" "${pkgs.vapoursynth-mvtools}/lib/vapoursynth"
];
});
}
```
Since `programs.mpv.package` doesn't necessary reflect the final
derivation anymore (see #1524), we introduce `programs.mpv.finalPackage`
that has the resulting derivation.
This includes 2 tests:
- One to check if everything is alright with mpv
- Other to validate our assertion that package and scripts can't be
passed both at the same time
* docs: document recent mpv module changes
* mpv: add thiagokokada as maintainer
We currently check `isPath` and `isString` on crxPath and version
respectively, which is
1. pointless because the module system already does such checks, and
2. wrong because isPath means path literal; a derivation therefore is
not a path.
mu-cfind is meant to search for contacts within your contacts database and the emails that you have sent/received. The use of the --personal flag in that command is meant to filter for only emails that use your email addresses (which are all the ones you specify with the ${myAddresses} variable. Disregard what I said in #1623 (comment).
--my-address=<my-email-address>
specifies that some e-mail addresses are 'my-address' (--my-address can be used multiple times).
This is used by mu cfind -- any e-mail address found in the address fields of a message which also
has <my-email-address> in one of its address fields is considered a personal e-mail address. This
allows you, for example, to filter out (mu cfind --personal) addresses which were merely seen in
mailing list messages.
To initialize the database with mu init, the ${myAddresses} is not required to be passed to successfully initialize the database, but it is heavily recommended to do so.
To see the difference, in a safe location, run mu init --maildir=<path>, then mu index. You'll notice that "personal addresses" returns <none>, although the database will still work. However, mu cfind --personal will fail (as the personal contacts don't exist). Then run mu init --maildir=<path> --my-address=<address>, then mu index. Then you'll be able to search for contacts using mu cfind --personal.
* neovim: write config in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/init.vim
instead of wrapping the configuration, which has sideeffects
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/55376
* fix: update test accordingly
Previously, it was not possible to set an arbitrary tmux prefix since
CTRL was hardcoded in the module.
To avoid breaking existing configs, a new option was implemented that
conveniently uses the tmux terminology but defaults to null and does
not affect previous behavior when set to null.
The behavior for the shortcut option was not completely replicated,
i.e., it does not bind "b" to send-prefix but stick to the default of
the prefix binding sending prefix (C-b C-b instead of C-b b) and it
does not bind repetition of the prefix (C-b C-b) to `last-window`,
both of these bring the option closer to the default tmux
configuration.
Fixes#1237
Brave Browser is a chromium-based browser, too.
+ it use the same web store with Chromium and Google Chrome.
+ the machanism of installing extensions works, and it's verified on
my macOS box.
The current definition makes waybar wait for dbus.service, but that
never happens because dbus.service is started on demand by
dbus.socket.
Per systemd docs:
https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.service.html#Implicit%20Dependencies
- Services with Type=dbus set automatically acquire dependencies of
type Requires= and After= on dbus.socket.
- Socket activated services are automatically ordered after their
activating .socket units via an automatic After= dependency.
Services also pull in all .socket units listed in Sockets= via
automatic Wants= and After= dependencies.
Removing Requisite/After makes the service properly start for me,
simply specifying Type=dbus is enough.
See #1370
- Change the `attrsOf unspecified` to `pkgs.formats.json`
- Add missing default modules
- Expand the `with lib` with every function used
- Add inline documentation about the generated warnings
The `invocation` is an optional attribute, so it doesn't make sense to
use it as the key in an attribute set. See
https://dystroy.org/broot/documentation/configuration/#verb-definition-attributes
Actually, `invocation` should not be defined when one wants to rebind
a built-in verb to a different key.
Also added documentation for the `key` attribute.
There exist mpv configurations which cannot be expressed in
`programs.mpv.config` currently. For example, it is impossible to use
multiple 'profile' attributes. This commit changes the way config and
profiles are parsed, using `lib.generators.toKeyValue` and
`lib.generators.toINI`, to allow for these kinds of configurations
through the use of `listsAsDuplicateKeys`.
The `accounts.email.accounts.<name>.neomutt.extraConfig` option is
included twice in the resulting config file for the account. One time as
part of the `mraSection`, one time as part of `accountStr` (`accountStr`
includes the `mraSection`). This removes that duplication. I opted to
keep the one in `accounStr`, since `extraConfig` doesn't necessarily
have anything to do with the `mraSection`.
In feh you can bind multiple keys to the same action, but Home Manager
only let you set a single key to an action. You can cheat and pass a
string with space-separated keys, but with this change you can pass a
list for each action to bind multiple keys to it.
Also adds a couple of tests.
Fixes#1366
* neovim: allow setting init.vim config alongside plugins
* neovim: add test for neovim plugins
* neovim: make pluginWithConfigType a have type submodule
Adds a pet module without sync support as it makes no sense when
configuration is managed with Home Manager and the config would be
unwritable for pet anyway.
PR #1045
* mbsync: option for configuring a channel
A channel is a relationship between 2 directories/boxes/mailboxes
between the local machine (slave) and the remote mail server (master).
Each channel must be given at least:
* an account-unique name
* a pattern for which mailboxes to sync from master
* a pattern for what directory where that mail ends up on the
slave
Additional options can be added later.
* mbsync: option for configuring a group
A group is a grouping of channels together, so that many channels with
very different names can be handled as a single entity.
Groups are unique in mbsync because they will shadow channels that
have the same name on the command-line.
* mbsync: create groups configuration attribute
This is the end of the configuration that the end-user will use.
They will specify an attribute set that contains the name for the
group, so they can say
`accounts.email.accounts.<aname>.groups.<gname>` to access the
configuration for the group with the name `<gname>`.
* mbsync: write function to generate group-channel blocks
This function takes in a set of groups, and their consituent
channels and writes the appropriate .mbsyncrc block. The block is as
shown below:
Group groupName1
Channel channelName1
Channel channelName2
Group groupName2
Channel channelName3
Each group must have a unique name, no matter which account it is
declared under. The same holds true for channels. However, if there is
a group that shares the same name as the channel, the channel will
effectively be "shadowed" by the group, and mbsync will default to
working with the group in that case.
* mbsync: write function to generate channel configuration blocks
This function takes in a set of groups, which includes their
consituent channels and writes the appropriate .mbsyncrc block for the
channel. The block that is generated is shown below:
Channel groupName1-channelName1
Master :<accountName>-remote:<master-pattern>
Slave :<accountName>-local:<slave-pattern>
Channel groupName2-channelName2
Master :<accountName>-remote:<master-pattern>
Slave :<accountName>-local:<slave-pattern>
Each group must have a unique name, no matter which account it is
declared under. The same holds true for channels.
Using channels with the patterns set up this way allows one to specify
which maildir directories are to be synchronized FROM the master TO
the slave. In addition, it allows for these maildirs to be remapped,
between the master server and the local slave.
This is critical, because Gmail has a strange way of storing its mail
that makes using mbsync, mu, and mu4e more difficult.
There are additional channel parameters that are already present in
this codebase from the previous use of group-channel configuration,
which will be reused.
* mbsync: set the submodule's names field according to parameter
This is the same method as is used in creating an email account, named
`<name>` under `accounts.email.accounts.<name>`. This allows the user
to specify groups and channels, in a list-like format, but still gets
the "namespacing" to more easily handle the options available in each
of these locations.
* mbsync: provide examples of master/slave patterns for channels
* mbsync: create nested-let function to generate channel pattern
This pattern is required to either NOT be present, which means the
master pattern is used to match, or it has a list of patterns to use
beneath the master maildir to match against.
This function checks to ensure that if patterns is not empty, ONLY
then is the `Pattern` keyword printed. Otherwise, there are many, many
problems.
If there IS a list of patterns, then we use proper escaping methods to
ensure that the exact string is constructed.
* mbsync: per-account groups can have additional patterns
Gave the
`accounts.email.accounts.<name>.mbsync.groups.<gname>.channel.<cname>`
set a `patterns` option, which will allow for greater customization
and filtering of the master maildir to sync to the slave maildir.
* mbsync: add extraConfig option for easier-to-format options
These are options that can be handled by the `genSection` function in
the `genAccountFunction`, so they are left to the user to decide.
Most of these are made on a global basis anyways.
* mbsync: remove unneeded extraConfig.channel
This was originally placed here, seemingly, just to get this module
working. However, this field is actually more confusing now that a
separate per-channel configuration option for extra configurations has
been made available.
* mbsync: correct and improve comment in masterPattern description
* mbsync: switch channel/group generation to new functions
Changing this out is what moves us from the old system to the new one.
Instead of having a single channel manage a whole mailbox, we can now
specify an attribute set of groups that should correspond to an email
account.
Each of these groups contains an attribute set of channels that make
it up, and are grouped together for synchronization. In addition, each
of these channels can have additional IMAP4 parameters attached to
them to further refine synchronization.
Lastly, each of the channels is grouped together under the Group
section, ensuring that the channels' mailboxes synchronize as they
have been specified.
* mbsync: only generate group/channel configuration if channels present
Typically, when a group is specified, channels will be specified as
well. However, if due to error or mistake, the user forgets to specify
ANY channels for a group, we should not generate that group's
information.
This means that no channels are specified (which maps the remote
master to local slave). In addition, the `Group <gName>` block (which
brings the separate channels together) is also not generated.
Another thing to consider is that a user might specify a group and a
channel, but perform no additional configuration of the channel.
In a configuration, this would be realized by
`accounts.email.accounts.<aName>.mbsync.groups.<gName>.channels.<cName>;`
This creates the channel with the name `<cName>` and the
`masterPattern`, `slavePattern`, and `patterns` fields use their defaults.
By definitions set within mbsync, these defaults actually specify that
the remote master's `INBOX` mail directory is synchronized to the
local slave's `INBOX` directory.
So, if there is a channel that has no fields specified, then we DO
want to generate its configuration. But if there is a group that has
no channels, then we do NOT generate it.
* mbsync: acc comment explaining why groups attr set is never empty
* Revert "mbsync: remove unneeded extraConfig.channel"
This reverts commit 941c4771ca.
To support backwards compatibility, I need to leave this field/option
in the module, even if it will likely be more confusing to do it this way.
* mbsync: channel compatibility with previous iteration of mbsync
The previous version of mbsync used a single channel for an entire
account. This leads to issues when trying to change the mailbox
hierarchy on the local machine. The problem with this is that some
email providers (Gmail, among others) use a slightly different maildir
hierarchy, where the standard mailboxes (Inbox, Drafts, Trash, etc.)
are stored inside another directory (`[Gmail]/` in the case of Gmail).
This new version allows the user to specify any number of groups with
any number of channels within to reorder their mail however they wish.
However, to maintain backwards compatibility, I moved the original
channel-generating code to a function that will run ONLY when
there are no groups specified for THIS account.
* Revert "mbsync: channel compatibility with previous iteration of mbsync"
This reverts commit b1a241ff9f.
This function is in the wrong location and this was wrongly committed.
* mbsync: function for backwards compatibility with previous mbsync
NOTE THAT THIS IS THE CORRECT COMMIT FOR THIS CHUNK OF CODE!!
The previous version of mbsync used a single channel for an entire
account. This leads to issues when trying to change the mailbox
hierarchy on the local machine. The problem with this is that some
email providers (Gmail, among others) use a slightly different maildir
hierarchy, where the standard mailboxes (Inbox, Drafts, Trash, etc.)
are stored inside another directory (`[Gmail]/` in the case of Gmail).
This new version allows the user to specify any number of groups with
any number of channels within to reorder their mail however they wish.
However, to maintain backwards compatibility, I moved the original
channel-generating code to a function that will run ONLY when
there are no groups specified for THIS account.
* mbsync: function to choose which style of group/channels to generate
This is a simple if-check. If the old style is used, then this
account's mbsync.groups attribute set is empty. If that is the case,
then the old-style single-channel per account is used.
If that is NOT the case, then the new style is used in preference of
the old. This means that ALL channel code that would be generated by
the old version is replaced by the new one.
* mbsync: switch per-account config generation to check channels
* mbsync: program-wide groups if no account-specific groups
At the end, we have to choose whether or not to generate the old style
of having program-wide groups to specify things, where the boxes on
the channel underneath the group specifies which mailboxes to sync.
Here, we only generate the old style of group IF there is ANY account
that does NOT have the new `accounts.mbsync.groups` defined. At that
point, it is up to the user to ensure that the accounts in
`programs.mbsync.groups.{}` align with the name chosen for the
account, as I have made no attempt to change this old code.
However, if ALL accounts have their `mbsync.groups` defined, even if
each of the groups has a single empty channel, it will generate the
groups in the new style.
* mbsync: ensure \n after hm-generated comment
This was a multi-part fix. First, the `# Generated by Home Manager.`
comment has been reworked to ensure that it will ALWAYS have a
newline, even if the program-wide extraConfiguration is empty.
Next, we switched to placing 2 newlines between every account, to
provide further visual distinction between each account, which can
have multiple channels and multiple groups defined at the same time.
Lastly, the groupsConfig was slightly reworked, so that both the old
and new version can be used, but the new one will take precedence.
Because of this, groupsConfig is now a list of strings, which will
have single newlines inserted between each element.
But if the old style is NOT used, then the groupsConfig list
contains one element, an empty string. A single element has nothing
added as a separator, and an empty string produces no output.
* mbsync: only generate new group/channels if channels present
Here, the problem was if the user created a group for an account, but
did not also include a set of channels. If no channels have been
specified, then the group should NOT have its group-channel mapping generated.
I also corrected and improved the comment regarding
`genGroupChannelString`'s function and intended behavior.
* mbsync: channel patterns generate their own newlines
This means that when a channel has extra `patterns` defined for it, it
will generate those, and a single newline will be appended to the end
of that newly constructed string.
The moving of the newline character is slightly important because
otherwise, every account would receive an extra newline after every
channel, leading to 2 newlines after every channel.
* mbsync: place newline between each channel in a group
* mbsync: ensure old group/channel has proper spacing
This ensures that if the old style of generating program-wide groups
that there is the proper spacing before the group and in between each
line within the group.
* mbsync: ensure no empty channels present
If the user specifies a group correctly, they must still specify an
attribute set of channels. However, if they do not, then we need to
ensure that a group with no channels does NOT have any channel
configurations generated for it.
If there is a channel string generated for a channel that is empty,
then the `mapAttrsToList` returns a singleton list that contains just
the empty string. Thus, we can filter out all those results, to ensure
that no empty channels are generated.
It is important to keep in mind the difference between an empty
channel and a channel that has received no configuration, but is
named.
* A named channel is technically configured to have a name.
While the `masterPattern`, `slavePattern`, and `patterns`
field have NOT been populated, mbsync assumes that if
master/slave-Pattern are empty that means match against
`INBOX`.
If `patterns` is empty, no patterns are printed.
* An empty channel set is a set that has no channels within
it, but `mbsync.groups.<gName>.channels` is defined.
* mbsync: filter empty groups and correct newlines
First thing, someone can specify that a group is empty. If this is
done, technically a group with channels would be generated at the end.
However, because they were empty and did not exist, whitespacing would
be generated, leading to a usable, but mangled config file.
The `filter` solves this problem by removing empty strings (which are
generated by groups that are empty) from the output strings to place
in the file.
Lastly, because the whitespacing was fixed elsewhere in the file, the
crazy double-newline at the end was changed to a single newline.
However, the double newline within the `concatStringsSep` is still
required, because the list that is being concatenated together is a
list of channel configurations. Each element corresponds to one of the
groups specified, whose contents are the channels specified within.
The double newline is needed because each string element is lacking a
trailing newline, because `concatStringsSep` does not add the
separator to the end of the last element in the list. So, the last
channel to be configured will not have that newline appended when the
channel-configuration list is created, thus, 2 are inserted here.
* mbsync: update test input to use per-account channels
* mbsync: comment how old/new style collision handled
This is left in the test input for now, because I think it is useful
to see why certain things are happening the way they are.
* mbsync: update test output pattern
The test output should now have the correct configuration according to
the way I have specified it in the input file.
* mbsync: use format script on new code
* mbsync: add KarlJoad as maintainer
Co-authored-by: Nick Hu <me@nickhu.co.uk>
The apropos software is useful to get a list of manpages matching a
description or to get a list of all manpages. The latter feature is
used by Emacs to get manpage completion (`M-x man`).
To have apropos working, a database of all available manpages must be
built with mandb. This is what this commits does.
A similar change was done for NixOS:
edc6a76cc0
Running `zplug install` will always product output, even if there is
nothing to do.
Gating it behind a `zplug check` eliminates that output when there is
nothing to do, and is recommended in the zplug README.
Adds a new `keybindings` option to the `vscode` configuration.
It contains a list of key bindings, which will be written to
`%vscode-dir%/User/keybindings.json`.
PR #1351
The kakoune editor has a plugin mechanism and several plugins are
already packaged under `pkgs.kakounePlugins`. However, adding these
packages to `home.packages` is not enough: the `kakoune` package needs
to be configured with the list of plugins to include, so that they get
sourced on start-up.
We add a `programs.kakoune.plugins` option, analogous to
`programs.vim.plugins`.
The change is backwards compatible since `pkgs.kakoune` is defined as
wrapKakoune kakoune-unwrapped { };
and `wrapKakoune` defaults the list of plugins to empty.
PR #1356
The git-send-email [0] script uses StartTLS if `smtpEncryption` is set
to `tls`, which can break services that don't support StartTLS.
[0]: bd42bbe1a4/git-send-email.perl (L1533)
PR #1395
We were passing the separators for the `show-whitespaces` highlighter
verbatim. This was problematic in case one wanted to use, spaces,
quotes or `%` as separators since the resulting kakoune configuration
would be invalid.
According to kakoune's docs, the separator has to be one character
long, so we can use a simple rule for escaping them. It is possible
that people has been working this around by passing, e.g. `"' '"` as
separator in order to get a space (i.e., escaped explicitly by the
user), so we just let longer strings be used verbatim.
PR #1357
The previous fish integration for starship erroneously used parts of
POSIX-esque test syntax. It also used `-n` instead of `-z` to check
for an unset variable.
PR #1422
The option to remove the default keybindings by setting the
`programs.qutebrowser.enableDefaultKeybindings` variable to `false`
had a list wrapped around the `config.py` line. This would cause a
type coercion error.
PR #1410
This switches the type of `matchBlocks` from `loaOf` to `listOrDagOf`.
The former has been deprecated in Nixpkgs. The latter allows
dependencies between entries to be expressed using the DAG functions.