It is safest to use the system install of Nix since that will be
compatible with the running nix-daemon and/or databases.
Also add a printout of the used Nix version in the activation script
when running in verbose mode.
Fixes#218.
(cherry picked from commit 19b4002f25)
Curiously the `who` command sometimes does not list logged-in users,
resulting in systemd not being reloaded. Instead we use
systemctl --user is-system-running
to more directly detect whether systemd is running.
(cherry picked from commit e307ceeee7)
This is a NixOS module that is intended to be imported into a NixOS
system configuration. It allows the system users to be set up directly
from the system configuration.
The actual profile switch is performed by a oneshot systemd unit per
configured user that acts much like the regular `home-manager switch`
command.
With this implementation, the NixOS module does not work properly with
the `nixos-rebuild build-vm` command. This can be solved by using the
`users.users.<name?>.packages` option to install packages but this
does not work flawlessly with certain Nixpkgs packages. In particular,
for programs using the Qt libraries.
Adds a service for the Stalonetray system tray.
Configured through a 'config' attribute set, which writes space
separated key value pairs on successive lines to `~/.stalonetrayrc`.
Very simple module for hg based on programs.git, and is intended to have
compatible options. For simple setups, a user should be able to write
something like:
{...}:
let vcsconfig = {
enable = true;
userName = "John Smith";
userEmail = "js@example.com";
ignores = [ "*.swp" "*~" ];
};
in
{
programs.git = vcsconfig // {...extra git config...};
programs.mercurial = vcsconfig // {...extra hg confg...};
}
For this reason, the ignore options are `ignores` for `syntax: glob`
and `ignoresRegexp` for `syntax: regexp` so that simple glob ignores
can (very likely) be shared with a git config, despite regular
expressions being the default for mercurial.
This variable adds some extra flexibility in constructing the
`~/.bashrc` file. Currently the option is hidden from public
documentation since the option name is provisional.