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).
Adds a programs.rio module to control Rio installation and configuration, a gpu accelerated terminal
Signed-off-by: Otavio Salvador <otavio@ossystems.com.br>
- 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
* imapnotify: expose package (and exe) options
There are multiple packages that provide an imapnotify interface. Those
packages have differently named executables. This can now be customized.
This change also means test configurations can use stub packages.
* imapnotify: use/create config in configHome
Exposing the configuration file makes testing imapnotify configurations much
easier. It also allows for golden tests in home-manager.
* imapnotify: extend with launchd agent
Now that home-manager supports launchd agents, the imapnotify service
can be configured (and enabled) for darwin. The configuration matches
that of the linux/systemd version. In particular, by not setting a
`UserName`, this runs as the user whose configuration includes the
module.
Due to the launchd `Program` implementation (it must take an absolute
path) it is not possible to use that for the program and stub the path
in tests. Instead, this uses `ProgramArguments` for the program name.
The `ThrottleInterval` is equivalent to `RestartSec`. `KeepAlive` is
equivalent to `Restart`.
The `ExitTimeOut` default is 20 seconds, but goimapnotify should not
time out — this is achieved by setting the `ExitTimeout` to 0.
* imapnotify: add launchd plist test
This only tests the generated plist (which is new), not the original
systemd implementation, nor the json config file.
(Note the lack of a newline at the end of the plist file.)
* boxxy: add module
* boxxy: added nikp123 to maintainers list
* boxxy: use mkPackageOption instead for the package
Co-authored-by: Naïm Favier <n@monade.li>
* boxxy: use yaml generator instead of json
Co-authored-by: Naïm Favier <n@monade.li>
* boxxy: various fixes
* boxxy: various fixes (part 2)
* boxxy: various fixes (part 3)
* boxxy: various fixes (part 4)
forgot to run ./format, whoops
* boxxy: use literalExpression for the rewrite example
Co-authored-by: Naïm Favier <n@monade.li>
* boxxy: add news entry
---------
Co-authored-by: Naïm Favier <n@monade.li>
* zellij: adds options to integrate with zsh, bash and fish shells
* zellij: add tests for shell integration options
* zellij: eval setup auto start for fish integration
* zellij: use interactiveShellInit for fish integration
* zellij: fixes format issues
* zellij: enable shell integrations by default
* zellij: compresses shell integration test cases
* zellij: removes the disabled shell integration tests
* zellij: formats tests
Before this change, the default config provided by this module wrote
an empty file to `$HOME/.config/avizo/config.ini`, which caused a
bunch of errors, as Avizo tries to read a 'group' from the ini file,
which fails.
This commit also adds associated test cases.
PR #3871
Added a generator for the KDL document language.
This is in order for home-manager to natively generate
the new config format for zellij, as described in nix-community#3364.
There is not a one to one mapping between KDL and nix types,
but attrset translation is heavily based on KDLs JSON-IN-KDL microsyntax.
The exception here is the `_args` and `_props` arguments, which lets you
specify arguments and properties as described in the spec.
See more here:
- https://kdl.dev/
- https://github.com/kdl-org/kdl/blob/main/SPEC.md
The generator also conforms to the interface from the nixpkgs manual:
https://nixos.org/manual/nixpkgs/stable/#sec-generators
Co-authored-by: Gaetan Lepage <gaetan@glepage.com>
Allow setting the application package and storePath used by the
config. Since the `programs.password-store` Home Manager module sets
config values via global environment variables, the default behavior
of the module should continue to behave as before for the user.
Additionally,
- Adds a few tests.
- Use "escapeShellArg" function call to the path parameter call to
ensure paths with spaces work.
- Allow not setting storePath, which will cause `pass_secret_service`
to default to using `~/.password-store`.
- If `pass-secret-service` is enabled, set its store path to default
to the one defined in our password-store environment settings.
- Add myself (houstdav000) as maintainer.
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.
This adds support for configuring email accounts, with automatic smtp, imap,
sendmail (msmpt) and maildir (mbsync, offlineimap) setup in aerc,
via `accounts.email`.
This simplifies the code a bit and avoids using experimental Flake
functionality. If Flakes become stable before NixOS 22.11 then we can
consider having nmd and nmt as Flake inputs. Maybe could then also
avoid the need for flake-compat.
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
The user should always explicitly set the state version they wish to
use. Indeed, the configuration generated by the Home Manager install
script has set this option for a long time. This removal should
therefore not affect many users.
* Add flake.lock and clean up flake.nix
Add a lockfile to work around https://github.com/NixOS/nix/issues/6541
(and because it's a good idea anyway).
Also use flake-utils, and restrict ourselves to the five platforms
supported by nixpkgs. Otherwise, the IFD for nmd fails on weird
platforms. This fixes `nix flake check`.
Remove the redundant `apps` output, see https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/pull/2442#issuecomment-1133670487
* nixos,nix-darwin: factor out into a common module
* nixos,nix-darwin: make `home-managers.users` shallowly visible
Make sure the option is included in the NixOS/nix-darwin manual (but the
HM submodule options aren't).
Also add a static description to the HM submodule type so that we don't need to
evaluate the submodules just to build the option manual. This makes
nixos-search able to index the home-manager flake.
Also clean up some TODOs.
* flake: add nmd and nmt
This avoids having to use `pkgs.fetchFromGitLab` in an IFD, which causes
issues when indexing packages with nixos-search because `pkgs` is
instantiated with every platform.
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 module adds basic support for configuration specializations.
These allow the user to build multiple alternative configurations that
should be part of the same generation.
Removed by upstream since commit:
bcbc410c92
This commit is included since v9 release:
https://github.com/yshui/picom/releases/tag/v9https://github.com/yshui/picom/releases/tag/v9-rc1 (the actual changelog)
While this doesn't break the config per see, it results in the
following warning in the logs:
[ DD/MM/YYYY HH:MM:SS.mmm parse_config_libconfig WARN ] The
refresh-rate option has been deprecated. Please remove it from
your configuration file. If you encounter any problems without
this feature, please feel free to open a bug report
Beside the above change we also remove an old workaround and also
write the configuration file to a well-known location in the user's
home directory.
Nix permits user level configurations through ~/.config/nix/nix.conf that allow
customization of system-wide settings and behavior. This is beneficial in chroot
environments and for per-user configurations. System level Nix configurations in the
form of /etc/nix/nix.conf can be specified declaratively via the NixOS nix module but as
of currently no counter part exists in home-manager.
This PR is a port of the RFC42 implementation for the NixOS nix module[1]
to home-manager. Non-applicable options have been excluded and the config generation
backends have been tweaked to the backends offered by home-manager. A notable change
from the NixOS module is a mandatory option to specify the Nix binary corresponding
to the version "nix.conf" should be generated against. This is necessary because
the validation phase is dependent on the `nix show-config` subcommand on the host platform.
While it is possible to avoid validation entirely, the lack of type checking was deemed too significant.
In NixOs, the version information can be retrieved from the `package` option itself which
declares the Nix binary system-wide. However in home-manager, there is no pure way to
detect the system Nix version and what state version the "nix.conf" should be generated
against. Thus an option is used to overcome this limitation by forcing the user to
specify the Nix package. Note this interaction can still be automated by forwarding
the system-wide Nix package to the home-manager module if needed.
Three unit tests were added to test the module behavior for the empty settings, the example
settings and the example registry configurations respectively.
[1] - NixOS/nixpkgs#139075
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.