Introduces a new program called gradle for managing files stored in
the home directory by the [Gradle Build Tool](https://gradle.org).
Gradle uses the $HOME/.gradle folder for all it's configuration.
Features of the new program module are:
- Automatically setting programs.java.enable = true to make a Java
installation available for running Gradle.
- Specifying an alternate Gradle home directory
- Setting of abitrary values for gradle.properties stored inside the
Gradle home directory.
- Defining init scripts that will be linked into the init.d inside
the Gradle home directory.
Co-authored-by: Olli Helenius <liff@iki.fi>
Co-authored-by: Robert Helgesson <robert@rycee.net>
Adds a program module for [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com/).
Since Sapling itself is very similar in nature to Mercurial,
`modules/programs/mercurial.nix` was copied to make this module with
the ignore pieces removed (Sapling respects gitignore).
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
Adds a programs.rio module to control Rio installation and configuration, a gpu accelerated terminal
Signed-off-by: Otavio Salvador <otavio@ossystems.com.br>
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.
`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.