DBus activated services such as mako use the XCURSOR_THEME and
XCURSOR_SIZE environment variables to decide how to show the cursor,
so without these, the cursor may not match the rest of the desktop
when hovering over (in this example) mako notification surfaces.
Osmscout-server includes a setting in its UI to create a systemd user
service and socket to run the server on demand. This does not function
correctly on NixOS, for two reasons:
1. It assumes that the binary path is stable (e.g.
/usr/bin/osmscout-server), which is not the case on NixOS.
2. It auto-detects the unwrapped binary path, which doesn't work.
This module allows the user to access the same functionality on NixOS.
The service was never marked with a failed state with the previous
approach, which could lead broken synchronisation pair states to go
undetected.
The module now uses a timer instead of unlimited restarts, which does
not have this issue.
When using the previous approach I've always gotten errors that I can't
reload config on the .lock file that exists in /tmp when you run a
standard configured hyprland.
This commit improves this by using hyprctl to find instances to reload
instead.
We can remove the HYPRLAND_INSTANCE_SIGNATURE bogus assignment once
https://github.com/hyprwm/Hyprland/issues/4088 is resolved.
Co-authored-by: Carl Hjerpe <git@hjerpe.xyz>
Add the option sourceFirst to the hyprland module. When this option is
enabled source entries will be put near the top of the file, so that
the variables declared in other files can be used by the other
configuration entries.
Add "source" to the list of important prefixes when the former option
is enabled.
Resolves#4729
Occasionally, swayidle crashes with a failure to connect to the
Wayland session. Ideally, swayidle should automatically restart
instead of leaving the system in a vulnerable state.
When a process inside the sxhkd scope is OOM killed, if the OOM policy
is set to `stop` then the sxhkd scope itself will exit, terminating
every process launched from the keyboard.
This is undesirable, set it to `continue` instead to keep other
processes running.
For devices with more than one battery, cbatticon allows to set the
battery ID as optional positional argument. If this argument is not
given, it default to the first battery it would list with `cbatticon
-p`. This commit adds support for the batteryId option to the cbatticon
module.
Allows users to customize which environment variables to import in DBus
and SystemD user environments, and to specify which commands will be run
after the environment activation.
Fixesnix-community/home-manager#4488
The default config for sway generates a bar block with tray_output primary. But wayland (or sway, take your pick?) has no concept of a primary display so this just results in no tray anywhere.
A better default is "*" which puts the tray on every monitor, since sway can do so without issue.
Signed-off-by: Sefa Eyeoglu <contact@scrumplex.net>
Remove xwayland.hidpi option, since we're dropping HiDPI XWayland
patches support, opting to use the builtin xwayland:force_zero_scaling
option instead. It is described in more detail in
https://wiki.hyprland.org/ Configuring/XWayland.
- On darwin, creates a launch agent to run git-sync on an interval and
when the `path` changes.
- The `uri` option is not used on Darwin. The auto-creation of the
local git directory from the `uri` is a feature of the
git-sync-on-inotify [1] wrapper (which won't work on Darwin afaik)
and not `git-sync` itself.
[1] https://github.com/simonthum/git-sync/blob/master/contrib/git-sync-on-inotify
* hyprland: prioritize variables and beziers
The `settings` key now handles `$variables` and `bezier`s differently,
putting them at the top of the file.
Also, proper indentation has been implemented.
* Update modules/services/window-managers/hyprland.nix
Co-authored-by: Naïm Favier <n@monade.li>
* hyprland: add animations & beziers test
---------
Co-authored-by: Naïm Favier <n@monade.li>
These (and the `*MD` functions apart from `literalMD`) are now no-ops
in nixpkgs and serve no purpose other than to add additional noise and
potentially mislead people into thinking unmarked DocBook documentation
will still be accepted.
Note that if backporting changes including documentation to 23.05,
the `mdDoc` calls will need to be re-added.
To reproduce this commit, run:
$ NIX_PATH=nixpkgs=flake:nixpkgs/e7e69199f0372364a6106a1e735f68604f4c5a25 \
nix shell nixpkgs#coreutils \
-c find . -name '*.nix' \
-exec nix run -- github:emilazy/nix-doc-munge/98dadf1f77351c2ba5dcb709a2a171d655f15099 \
--strip {} +
$ ./format
This process was automated by [my fork of `nix-doc-munge`]. All
conversions were automatically checked to produce the same DocBook
result when converted back, modulo minor typographical/formatting
differences on the acceptable-to-desirable spectrum.
To reproduce this commit, run:
$ NIX_PATH=nixpkgs=flake:nixpkgs/e7e69199f0372364a6106a1e735f68604f4c5a25 \
nix shell nixpkgs#coreutils \
-c find . -name '*.nix' \
-exec nix run -- github:emilazy/nix-doc-munge/98dadf1f77351c2ba5dcb709a2a171d655f15099 \
{} +
$ ./format
[my fork of `nix-doc-munge`]: https://github.com/emilazy/nix-doc-munge/tree/home-manager
The NixOS variant of Markdown doesn't make a distinction between
`<code>` and `<literal>` or `<quote>` and... quotes, and doesn't
support `<parameter>` or `<replaceable>`. These are infrequently used
(apart from `<code>`) and don't add much, so just convert them to
simpler forms to allow the options containing them to be converted
to Markdown automatically.
A few minor syntactic adjustments were also made to make
`nix-doc-munge`'s job easier.
The Markdown options processor cannot handle rendering tables
to DocBook. This could be fixed, but as we won't be using the
DocBook output for long I just removed them for now in the interest
of expediency; they were all well-suited to being description lists
showing option types anyway, apart from one awkward case in the form
of trayer, which also had ad-hoc syntax for enumerating acceptable
values in the documentation. Since the types aren't actually used for
option processing anyway, I changed them to use `enum` and similar to
give a single description of the acceptable values without a big table.
`nix-doc-munge` can't handle these, which is understandable as I can
barely handle them either. There are a few infelicities here: the
current processor can't handle multiple terms to one description in
a description list so they get comma-separated in one case, and one
case that should ideally render as a `<figure>` with a `<figcaption>`
in HTML is reduced to a paragraph with some `<strong>` text. (Which, in
fairness, is how it rendered in practice with the DocBook anyway.) The
docs generator has since been updated to handle figures, but we can't
use it until moving off DocBook output.
These files all have options that trip up the `nix-doc-munge`
conversion tool for one reason or another (syntax that clashes with
Markdown, options that were already using Markdown syntax despite not
being marked that way, output that differs slightly after conversion,
syntax too elaborate to convert with some cheap regular expressions,
...). Translate them manually and do a little copyediting to options
in the vicinity while we're at it.
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`.