This adds support for configuring email accounts, with automatic smtp, imap,
sendmail (msmpt) and maildir (mbsync, offlineimap) setup in aerc,
via `accounts.email`.
Specifically,
- directly export `modules/lib/dag.nix` instead of renaming
attributes,
- run through utilities to reuse code where possible,
- expose `lib.hm.dag.isEntry` and reuse it in
`modules/lib/types-dag.nix`,
- reuse utilities through `lib` set instead of passing imports to
functions, and
- eta reduction of `map`, `entryAnywhere`, `entryAfter` and
`entryBefore`.
Removes the `uniq` constraint on `after` and `before` so that we can
merge multiple definitions for the same DAG entry:
{
dag = mkMerge [
{
foo = lib.hm.dag.entryBefore [ "bar" ] {
# definition 1
};
}
{
foo = lib.hm.dag.entryBefore [ "qux" ] {
# definition 2
};
}
{
foo = {
# definition 3
};
}
];
}
In this example `foo` will come before `bar` and `qux`.
This is adapted from the `services.mopidy` NixOS module. The
difference is the setting can be configured with Nix language, taking
advantage of generators from nixpkgs. The module is also suited more
for user-specific configuration, removing the `extraConfigFiles` and
`dataDir` option.
This makes definitions like
home.activation.foo = mkIf false "bar"
work, where previously they would complain about
`home.activation.foobar.data` being used but not defined.
The crucial part is that we don't call `convertAllToDags` in
`dagOf.merge`, because we need to process `mkIf`/`mkMerge` properties
first. So we let `attrEquivalent.merge` do its job normally, but give
it a type `dagEntryOf` that does the conversion.
Ideally this shouldn't require so much boilerplate; I'd like to
implement something like
types.changeInto dagContentType elemType dagEntryAnywhere
in Nixpkgs.
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.
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).
* screen-locker: Make xautolock optional, reorganize options
xautolock isn't really needed to trigger xss-lock on the basis of time
since the built-in screensaver functionality of X serves as one of the
event sources for xss-lock. Keeping it around and defaulting to
"enabled" to avoid unexpected breakage.
Also shuffled around the options to submodules for xss-lock and
xautolock to get rid of prefixes in option names and to make
enableDetectSleep a bit clearer.
* screen-locker: update maintainership
* tests/screen-locker: Stub i3lock and xss-lock
* screen-locker: add package options for xss-lock and xautolock
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
- 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
Previously, the comparison would not handle directory comparison
correctly, always finding that the source and target differed. This
would trigger the `onChange` script on each activation.
Fixes#2004
`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.
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
Enabling this flag for a `home.file` entry causes the target to be
unconditionally overwritten. The option is not visible in
documentation for now and shouldn't be relied on for general use.
This change makes use of the `extend` function inside `lib` to inject
a new `hm` field containing the Home Manager library functions. This
simplifies use of the Home Manager library in the modules and reduces
the risk of accidental infinite recursion.
PR #994
Given an inner type, the former function generates a type that expect
DAG option values. The latter function is only present to temporarily
allow the `programs.ssh.matchBlocks` to keep accepting list values.
Because `extraPackages` and `overrides` expect functions as values it
has not been possible to perform merges. This adds suitable types for
these options that allow reasonable merging.
In particular support source files whose name start with `.` or
contain characters not allowed in the nix store, such as spaces.
Also add some test cases for `home.file`.
Added utilities to generate export statements and definitions for zsh scripts.
Currently, there is only lib.shell which generates export statements in bash
syntax. However, this does not allow to generate export statements for zsh
arrays (syntax: NAME=(elem1 elem2 ...) ), which would be the natural
representation of lists in the nix language.