Table of Contents
ca.desrt.dconf
or dconf.service
? This manual will eventually describe how to install, use, and extend Home Manager.
If you encounter problems then please reach out on the IRC channel #home-manager hosted by OFTC. There is also a Matrix room, which is bridged to the IRC channel. If your problem is caused by a bug in Home Manager then it should be reported on the Home Manager issue tracker.
Commands prefixed with $ sudo
have to be run as root, either
requiring to login as root user or temporarily switching to it using
sudo
for example.
Home Manager is a Nix-powered tool for reproducible management of the contents of users’ home directories. This includes programs, configuration files, environment variables and, well… arbitrary files. The following example snippet of Nix code:
programs.git = {
enable = true;
userEmail = "joe@example.org";
userName = "joe";
};
would make available to a user the git
executable and man pages and a configuration file ~/.config/git/config
:
[user]
email = "joe@example.org"
name = "joe"
Since Home Manager is implemented in Nix, it provides several benefits:
Contents are reproducible — a home will be the exact same every time it is built, unless of course, an intentional change is made. This also means you can have the exact same home on different hosts.
Significantly faster and more powerful than various backup strategies.
Unlike “dotfiles” repositories, Home Manager supports specifying programs, as well as their configurations.
Supported by http://cache.nixos.org/, so that you don’t have to build from source.
If you do want to build some programs from source, there is hardly a tool more useful than Nix for that, and the build instructions can be neatly integrated in your Home Manager usage.
Infinitely composable, so that values in different configuration files and build instructions can share a source of truth.
Connects you with the most extensive and most up-to-date software package repository on earth, Nixpkgs.
Home Manager can be used in three primary ways:
Using the standalone home-manager
tool. For platforms other than
NixOS and Darwin, this is the only available choice. It is also
recommended for people on NixOS or Darwin that want to manage their
home directory independently of the system as a whole. See
Standalone installation for instructions
on how to perform this installation.
As a module within a NixOS system configuration. This allows the
user profiles to be built together with the system when running
nixos-rebuild
. See NixOS module for a
description of this setup.
As a module within a
nix-darwin system
configuration. This allows the user profiles to be built together
with the system when running darwin-rebuild
. See nix-darwin
module for a description of this
setup.
In this chapter we describe how to install Home Manager in the standard way using channels. If you prefer to use Nix Flakes then please see the instructions in nix flakes.
Table of Contents
Make sure you have a working Nix installation. Specifically, make
sure that your user is able to build and install Nix packages. For
example, you should be able to successfully run a command like
nix-instantiate '<nixpkgs>' -A hello
without having to switch to
the root user. For a multi-user install of Nix this means that your
user must be covered by the
allowed-users
Nix option. On NixOS you can control this option using the
nix.settings.allowed-users
system option.
Add the appropriate Home Manager channel. If you are following Nixpkgs master or an unstable channel you can run
$ nix-channel --add https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/archive/master.tar.gz home-manager
$ nix-channel --update
and if you follow a Nixpkgs version 24.05 channel you can run
$ nix-channel --add https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/archive/release-24.05.tar.gz home-manager
$ nix-channel --update
Run the Home Manager installation command and create the first Home Manager generation:
$ nix-shell '<home-manager>' -A install
Once finished, Home Manager should be active and available in your user environment.
If you do not plan on having Home Manager manage your shell configuration then you must source the
$HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh
file in your shell configuration. Alternatively source
/etc/profiles/per-user/$USER/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh
when managing home configuration together with system configuration.
This file can be sourced directly by POSIX.2-like shells such as Bash or Z shell. Fish users can use utilities such as foreign-env or babelfish.
For example, if you use Bash then add
. "$HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh"
to your ~/.profile
file.
If instead of using channels you want to run Home Manager from a Git checkout of the repository then you can use the home-manager.path option to specify the absolute path to the repository.
Once installed you can see Using Home Manager for a more detailed description of Home Manager and how to use it.
Home Manager provides a NixOS module that allows you to prepare user
environments directly from the system configuration file, which often is
more convenient than using the home-manager
tool. It also opens up
additional possibilities, for example, to automatically configure user
environments in NixOS declarative containers or on systems deployed
through NixOps.
To make the NixOS module available for use you must import
it into
your system configuration. This is most conveniently done by adding a
Home Manager channel to the root user. For example, if you are following
Nixpkgs master or an unstable channel, you can run
$ sudo nix-channel --add https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/archive/master.tar.gz home-manager
$ sudo nix-channel --update
and if you follow a Nixpkgs version 24.05 channel, you can run
$ sudo nix-channel --add https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/archive/release-24.05.tar.gz home-manager
$ sudo nix-channel --update
It is then possible to add
imports = [ <home-manager/nixos> ];
to your system configuration.nix
file, which will introduce a new
NixOS option called home-manager.users
whose type is an attribute set
that maps user names to Home Manager configurations.
For example, a NixOS configuration may include the lines
users.users.eve.isNormalUser = true;
home-manager.users.eve = { pkgs, ... }: {
home.packages = [ pkgs.atool pkgs.httpie ];
programs.bash.enable = true;
# The state version is required and should stay at the version you
# originally installed.
home.stateVersion = "24.05";
};
and after a sudo nixos-rebuild switch
the user eve’s environment
should include a basic Bash configuration and the packages atool and
httpie.
If nixos-rebuild switch
does not result in the environment you expect,
you can take a look at the output of the Home Manager activation script
output using
$ systemctl status "home-manager-$USER.service"
If you do not plan on having Home Manager manage your shell configuration then you must add either
. "$HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh"
or
. "/etc/profiles/per-user/$USER/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh"
to your shell configuration, depending on whether home-manager.useUserPackages is enabled. This file can be sourced directly by POSIX.2-like shells such as Bash or Z shell. Fish users can use utilities such as foreign-env or babelfish.
By default packages will be installed to $HOME/.nix-profile
but they
can be installed to /etc/profiles
if
home-manager.useUserPackages = true;
is added to the system configuration. This is necessary if, for example,
you wish to use nixos-rebuild build-vm
. This option may become the
default value in the future.
By default, Home Manager uses a private pkgs
instance that is
configured via the home-manager.users.<name>.nixpkgs
options. To
instead use the global pkgs
that is configured via the system level
nixpkgs
options, set
home-manager.useGlobalPkgs = true;
This saves an extra Nixpkgs evaluation, adds consistency, and removes
the dependency on NIX_PATH
, which is otherwise used for importing
Nixpkgs.
Home Manager will pass osConfig
as a module argument to any modules
you create. This contains the system’s NixOS configuration.
{ lib, pkgs, osConfig, ... }:
Once installed you can see Using Home Manager for a more detailed description of Home Manager and how to use it.
Home Manager provides a module that allows you to prepare user
environments directly from the
nix-darwin configuration file,
which often is more convenient than using the home-manager
tool.
To make the NixOS module available for use you must import
it into
your system configuration. This is most conveniently done by adding a
Home Manager channel. For example, if you are following Nixpkgs master
or an unstable channel, you can run
$ nix-channel --add https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/archive/master.tar.gz home-manager
$ nix-channel --update
and if you follow a Nixpkgs version 24.05 channel, you can run
$ nix-channel --add https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/archive/release-24.05.tar.gz home-manager
$ nix-channel --update
It is then possible to add
imports = [ <home-manager/nix-darwin> ];
to your nix-darwin configuration.nix
file, which will introduce a new
NixOS option called home-manager
whose type is an attribute set that
maps user names to Home Manager configurations.
For example, a nix-darwin configuration may include the lines
users.users.eve = {
name = "eve";
home = "/Users/eve";
};
home-manager.users.eve = { pkgs, ... }: {
home.packages = [ pkgs.atool pkgs.httpie ];
programs.bash.enable = true;
# The state version is required and should stay at the version you
# originally installed.
home.stateVersion = "24.05";
};
and after a darwin-rebuild switch
the user eve’s environment should
include a basic Bash configuration and the packages atool and httpie.
If you do not plan on having Home Manager manage your shell configuration then you must add either
. "$HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh"
or
. "/etc/profiles/per-user/$USER/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh"
to your shell configuration, depending on whether home-manager.useUserPackages is enabled. This file can be sourced directly by POSIX.2-like shells such as Bash or Z shell. Fish users can use utilities such as foreign-env or babelfish.
By default user packages will not be ignored in favor of
environment.systemPackages
, but they will be installed to
/etc/profiles/per-user/$USERNAME
if
home-manager.useUserPackages = true;
is added to the nix-darwin configuration. This option may become the default value in the future.
By default, Home Manager uses a private pkgs
instance that is
configured via the home-manager.users.<name>.nixpkgs
options. To
instead use the global pkgs
that is configured via the system level
nixpkgs
options, set
home-manager.useGlobalPkgs = true;
This saves an extra Nixpkgs evaluation, adds consistency, and removes
the dependency on NIX_PATH
, which is otherwise used for importing
Nixpkgs.
Home Manager will pass osConfig
as a module argument to any modules
you create. This contains the system’s nix-darwin configuration.
{ lib, pkgs, osConfig, ... }:
Once installed you can see Using Home Manager for a more detailed description of Home Manager and how to use it.
Your use of Home Manager is centered around the configuration file,
which is typically found at ~/.config/home-manager/home.nix
in the
standard installation or ~/.config/home-manager/flake.nix
in a Nix
flake based installation.
The default configuration used to be placed in ~/.config/nixpkgs
¸ so
you may see references to that elsewhere. The old directory still works
but Home Manager will print a warning message when used.
This configuration file can be built and activated.
Building a configuration produces a directory in the Nix store that contains all files and programs that should be available in your home directory and Nix user profile, respectively. The build step also checks that the configuration is valid and it will fail with an error if you, for example, assign a value to an option that does not exist or assign a value of the wrong type. Some modules also have custom assertions that perform more detailed, module specific, checks.
Concretely, if your configuration contains
programs.emacs.enable = "yes";
then building it, for example using home-manager build
, will result in
an error message saying something like
$ home-manager build
error: A definition for option `programs.emacs.enable' is not of type `boolean'. Definition values:
- In `/home/jdoe/.config/home-manager/home.nix': "yes"
(use '--show-trace' to show detailed location information)
The message indicates that you must provide a Boolean value for this
option, that is, either true
or false
. The documentation of each
option will state the expected type, for
programs.emacs.enable you will see “Type: boolean”. You
there also find information about the default value and a description of
the option. You can find the complete option documentation in
Home Manager Configuration Options or directly in the terminal by running
man home-configuration.nix
Once a configuration is successfully built, it can be activated. The
activation performs the steps necessary to make the files, programs, and
services available in your user environment. The home-manager switch
command performs a combined build and activation.
Table of Contents
A fresh install of Home Manager will generate a minimal
~/.config/home-manager/home.nix
file containing something like
{ config, pkgs, ... }:
{
# Home Manager needs a bit of information about you and the
# paths it should manage.
home.username = "jdoe";
home.homeDirectory = "/home/jdoe";
# This value determines the Home Manager release that your
# configuration is compatible with. This helps avoid breakage
# when a new Home Manager release introduces backwards
# incompatible changes.
#
# You can update Home Manager without changing this value. See
# the Home Manager release notes for a list of state version
# changes in each release.
home.stateVersion = "24.05";
# Let Home Manager install and manage itself.
programs.home-manager.enable = true;
}
You can use this as a base for your further configurations.
If you are not very familiar with the Nix language and NixOS modules then it is encouraged to start with small and simple changes. As you learn you can gradually grow the configuration with confidence.
As an example, let us expand the initial configuration file to also install the htop and fortune packages, install Emacs with a few extra packages available, and enable the user gpg-agent service.
To satisfy the above setup we should elaborate the home.nix
file as
follows:
{ config, pkgs, ... }:
{
# Home Manager needs a bit of information about you and the
# paths it should manage.
home.username = "jdoe";
home.homeDirectory = "/home/jdoe";
# Packages that should be installed to the user profile.
home.packages = [
pkgs.htop
pkgs.fortune
];
# This value determines the Home Manager release that your
# configuration is compatible with. This helps avoid breakage
# when a new Home Manager release introduces backwards
# incompatible changes.
#
# You can update Home Manager without changing this value. See
# the Home Manager release notes for a list of state version
# changes in each release.
home.stateVersion = "24.05";
# Let Home Manager install and manage itself.
programs.home-manager.enable = true;
programs.emacs = {
enable = true;
extraPackages = epkgs: [
epkgs.nix-mode
epkgs.magit
];
};
services.gpg-agent = {
enable = true;
defaultCacheTtl = 1800;
enableSshSupport = true;
};
}
Nixpkgs packages can be installed to the user profile using home.packages.
The option names of a program module typically start with
programs.<package name>
.
Similarly, for a service module, the names start with
services.<package name>
. Note in some cases a package has both
programs and service options – Emacs is such an example.
To activate this configuration you can run
home-manager switch
or if you are not feeling so lucky,
home-manager build
which will create a result
link to a directory containing an
activation script and the generated home directory files.
While the home-manager
tool does not explicitly support rollbacks at
the moment it is relatively easy to perform one manually. The steps to
do so are
Run home-manager generations
to determine which generation you
wish to rollback to:
$ home-manager generations
2018-01-04 11:56 : id 765 -> /nix/store/kahm1rxk77mnvd2l8pfvd4jkkffk5ijk-home-manager-generation
2018-01-03 10:29 : id 764 -> /nix/store/2wsmsliqr5yynqkdyjzb1y57pr5q2lsj-home-manager-generation
2018-01-01 12:21 : id 763 -> /nix/store/mv960kl9chn2lal5q8lnqdp1ygxngcd1-home-manager-generation
2017-12-29 21:03 : id 762 -> /nix/store/6c0k1r03fxckql4vgqcn9ccb616ynb94-home-manager-generation
2017-12-25 18:51 : id 761 -> /nix/store/czc5y6vi1rvnkfv83cs3rn84jarcgsgh-home-manager-generation
…
Copy the Nix store path of the generation you chose, e.g.,
/nix/store/mv960kl9chn2lal5q8lnqdp1ygxngcd1-home-manager-generation
for generation 763.
Run the activate
script inside the copied store path:
$ /nix/store/mv960kl9chn2lal5q8lnqdp1ygxngcd1-home-manager-generation/activate
Starting home manager activation
…
To configure programs and services Home Manager must write various things to your home directory. To prevent overwriting any existing files when switching to a new generation, Home Manager will attempt to detect collisions between existing files and generated files. If any such collision is detected the activation will terminate before changing anything on your computer.
For example, suppose you have a wonderful, painstakingly created
~/.config/git/config
and add
{
# …
programs.git = {
enable = true;
userName = "Jane Doe";
userEmail = "jane.doe@example.org";
};
# …
}
to your configuration. Attempting to switch to the generation will then result in
$ home-manager switch
…
Activating checkLinkTargets
Existing file '/home/jdoe/.config/git/config' is in the way
Please move the above files and try again
Home Manager includes a number of services intended to run in a
graphical session, for example xscreensaver
and dunst
.
Unfortunately, such services will not be started automatically unless
you let Home Manager start your X session. That is, you have something
like
{
# …
services.xserver.enable = true;
# …
}
in your system configuration and
{
# …
xsession.enable = true;
xsession.windowManager.command = "…";
# …
}
in your Home Manager configuration.
If you have installed Home Manager using the Nix channel method then updating Home Manager is done by first updating the channel. You can then switch to the updated Home Manager environment.
$ nix-channel --update
…
unpacking channels...
$ home-manager switch
Home Manager is compatible with Nix Flakes. But please be aware that this support is still experimental and may change in backwards incompatible ways.
Just like in the standard installation you can use the Home Manager flake in three ways:
Using the standalone home-manager
tool. For platforms other than
NixOS and Darwin, this is the only available choice. It is also
recommended for people on NixOS or Darwin that want to manage their
home directory independently of the system as a whole. See
Standalone setup for instructions on how
to perform this installation.
As a module within a NixOS system configuration. This allows the
user profiles to be built together with the system when running
nixos-rebuild
. See NixOS module for a
description of this setup.
This allows the user profiles to be built together with the system
when running darwin-rebuild
. See nix-darwin
module for a description of this
setup.
Table of Contents
Install Nix 2.4 or later, or have it in nix-shell
.
Enable experimental features nix-command
and flakes
.
When using NixOS, add the following to your configuration.nix
and rebuild your system.
nix = {
package = pkgs.nixFlakes;
extraOptions = ''
experimental-features = nix-command flakes
'';
};
If you are not using NixOS, add the following to nix.conf
(located at ~/.config/nix/
or /etc/nix/nix.conf
).
experimental-features = nix-command flakes
You may need to restart the Nix daemon with, for example,
sudo systemctl restart nix-daemon.service
.
Alternatively, you can enable flakes on a per-command basis with
the following additional flags to nix
and home-manager
:
$ nix --extra-experimental-features "nix-command flakes" <sub-commands>
$ home-manager --extra-experimental-features "nix-command flakes" <sub-commands>
Prepare your Home Manager configuration (home.nix
).
Unlike the channel-based setup, home.nix
will be evaluated when
the flake is built, so it must be present before bootstrap of Home
Manager from the flake. See Configuration Example for
introduction about writing a Home Manager configuration.
To prepare an initial Home Manager configuration for your logged in
user, you can run the Home Manager init
command directly from its
flake.
For example, if you are using the unstable version of Nixpkgs or NixOS, then to generate and activate a basic configuration run the command
$ nix run home-manager/master -- init --switch
For Nixpkgs or NixOS version 24.05 run
$ nix run home-manager/release-24.05 -- init --switch
This will generate a flake.nix
and a home.nix
file in
~/.config/home-manager
, creating the directory if it does not exist.
If you omit the --switch
option then the activation will not happen.
This is useful if you want to inspect and edit the configuration before
activating it.
$ nix run home-manager/$branch -- init
$ # Edit files in ~/.config/home-manager
$ nix run home-manager/$branch -- init --switch
Where $branch
is one of master
or release-24.05
.
After the initial activation has completed successfully then building and activating your flake-based configuration is as simple as
$ home-manager switch
It is possible to override the default configuration directory, if you want. For example,
$ nix run home-manager/$branch -- init --switch ~/hmconf
$ # And after the initial activation.
$ home-manager switch --flake ~/hmconf
The flake inputs are not automatically updated by Home Manager. You need
to use the standard nix flake update
command for that.
If you only want to update a single flake input, then the command
nix flake lock --update-input <input>
can be used.
You can also pass flake-related options such as --recreate-lock-file
or --update-input <input>
to home-manager
when building or
switching, and these options will be forwarded to nix build
. See the
NixOS Wiki page for details.
To use Home Manager as a NixOS module, a bare-minimum flake.nix
would
be as follows:
{
description = "NixOS configuration";
inputs = {
nixpkgs.url = "github:nixos/nixpkgs/nixos-unstable";
home-manager.url = "github:nix-community/home-manager";
home-manager.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
};
outputs = inputs@{ nixpkgs, home-manager, ... }: {
nixosConfigurations = {
hostname = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem {
system = "x86_64-linux";
modules = [
./configuration.nix
home-manager.nixosModules.home-manager
{
home-manager.useGlobalPkgs = true;
home-manager.useUserPackages = true;
home-manager.users.jdoe = import ./home.nix;
# Optionally, use home-manager.extraSpecialArgs to pass
# arguments to home.nix
}
];
};
};
};
}
The Home Manager configuration is then part of the NixOS configuration
and is automatically rebuilt with the system when using the appropriate
command for the system, such as
nixos-rebuild switch --flake <flake-uri>
.
You can use the above flake.nix
as a template in /etc/nixos
by
$ nix flake new /etc/nixos -t github:nix-community/home-manager#nixos
The flake-based setup of the Home Manager nix-darwin module is similar
to that of NixOS. The flake.nix
would be:
{
description = "Darwin configuration";
inputs = {
nixpkgs.url = "github:nixos/nixpkgs/nixos-unstable";
darwin.url = "github:lnl7/nix-darwin";
darwin.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
home-manager.url = "github:nix-community/home-manager";
home-manager.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
};
outputs = inputs@{ nixpkgs, home-manager, darwin, ... }: {
darwinConfigurations = {
hostname = darwin.lib.darwinSystem {
system = "x86_64-darwin";
modules = [
./configuration.nix
home-manager.darwinModules.home-manager
{
home-manager.useGlobalPkgs = true;
home-manager.useUserPackages = true;
home-manager.users.jdoe = import ./home.nix;
# Optionally, use home-manager.extraSpecialArgs to pass
# arguments to home.nix
}
];
};
};
};
}
and it is also rebuilt with the nix-darwin generations. The rebuild
command here may be darwin-rebuild switch --flake <flake-uri>
.
You can use the above flake.nix
as a template in ~/.config/darwin
by
$ nix flake new ~/.config/darwin -t github:nix-community/home-manager#nix-darwin
The module system in Home Manager is based entirely on the NixOS module system so we will here only highlight aspects that are specific for Home Manager. For information about the module system as such please refer to the Writing NixOS Modules chapter of the NixOS manual.
Table of Contents
Overall the basic option types are the same in Home Manager as NixOS. A
few Home Manager options, however, make use of custom types that are
worth describing in more detail. These are the option types dagOf
and
gvariant
that are used, for example, by
programs.ssh.matchBlocks and dconf.settings.
hm.types.dagOf
Options of this type have attribute sets as values where each member is a node in a directed acyclic graph (DAG). This allows the attribute set entries to express dependency relations among themselves. This can, for example, be used to control the order of match blocks in a OpenSSH client configuration or the order of activation script blocks in home.activation.
A number of functions are provided to create DAG nodes. The
functions are shown below with examples using an option foo.bar
of
type hm.types.dagOf types.int
.
hm.dag.entryAnywhere (value: T) : DagEntry<T>
Indicates that value
can be placed anywhere within the DAG.
This is also the default for plain attribute set entries, that
is
foo.bar = {
a = hm.dag.entryAnywhere 0;
}
and
foo.bar = {
a = 0;
}
are equivalent.
hm.dag.entryAfter (afters: list string) (value: T) : DagEntry<T>
Indicates that value
must be placed after each of the
attribute names in the given list. For example
foo.bar = {
a = 0;
b = hm.dag.entryAfter [ "a" ] 1;
}
would place b
after a
in the graph.
hm.dag.entryBefore (befores: list string) (value: T) : DagEntry<T>
Indicates that value
must be placed before each of the
attribute names in the given list. For example
foo.bar = {
b = hm.dag.entryBefore [ "a" ] 1;
a = 0;
}
would place b
before a
in the graph.
hm.dag.entryBetween (befores: list string) (afters: list string) (value: T) : DagEntry<T>
Indicates that value
must be placed before the attribute
names in the first list and after the attribute names in the
second list. For example
foo.bar = {
a = 0;
c = hm.dag.entryBetween [ "b" ] [ "a" ] 2;
b = 1;
}
would place c
before b
and after a
in the graph.
There are also a set of functions that generate a DAG from a list.
These are convenient when you just want to have a linear list of DAG
entries, without having to manually enter the relationship between
each entry. Each of these functions take a tag
as argument and the
DAG entries will be named ${tag}-${index}
.
hm.dag.entriesAnywhere (tag: string) (values: [T]) : Dag<T>
Creates a DAG with the given values with each entry labeled using the given tag. For example
foo.bar = hm.dag.entriesAnywhere "a" [ 0 1 ];
is equivalent to
foo.bar = {
a-0 = 0;
a-1 = hm.dag.entryAfter [ "a-0" ] 1;
}
hm.dag.entriesAfter (tag: string) (afters: list string) (values: [T]) : Dag<T>
Creates a DAG with the given values with each entry labeled
using the given tag. The list of values are placed are placed
after each of the attribute names in afters
. For example
foo.bar =
{ b = 0; }
// hm.dag.entriesAfter "a" [ "b" ] [ 1 2 ];
is equivalent to
foo.bar = {
b = 0;
a-0 = hm.dag.entryAfter [ "b" ] 1;
a-1 = hm.dag.entryAfter [ "a-0" ] 2;
}
hm.dag.entriesBefore (tag: string) (befores: list string) (values: [T]) : Dag<T>
Creates a DAG with the given values with each entry labeled
using the given tag. The list of values are placed before each
of the attribute names in befores
. For example
foo.bar =
{ b = 0; }
// hm.dag.entriesBefore "a" [ "b" ] [ 1 2 ];
is equivalent to
foo.bar = {
b = 0;
a-0 = 1;
a-1 = hm.dag.entryBetween [ "b" ] [ "a-0" ] 2;
}
hm.dag.entriesBetween (tag: string) (befores: list string) (afters: list string) (values: [T]) : Dag<T>
Creates a DAG with the given values with each entry labeled
using the given tag. The list of values are placed before each
of the attribute names in befores
and after each of the
attribute names in afters
. For example
foo.bar =
{ b = 0; c = 3; }
// hm.dag.entriesBetween "a" [ "b" ] [ "c" ] [ 1 2 ];
is equivalent to
foo.bar = {
b = 0;
c = 3;
a-0 = hm.dag.entryAfter [ "c" ] 1;
a-1 = hm.dag.entryBetween [ "b" ] [ "a-0" ] 2;
}
hm.types.gvariant
This type is useful for options representing GVariant values. The type accepts all primitive GVariant types as well as arrays, tuples, “maybe” types, and dictionaries.
Some Nix values are automatically coerced to matching GVariant value
but the GVariant model is richer so you may need to use one of the
provided constructor functions. Examples assume an option foo.bar
of type hm.types.gvariant
.
hm.gvariant.mkBoolean (v: bool)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant boolean
value (GVariant
format string b
). Note, Nix booleans are automatically coerced
using this function. That is,
foo.bar = hm.gvariant.mkBoolean true;
is equivalent to
foo.bar = true;
hm.gvariant.mkString (v: string)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant string
value (GVariant
format string s
). Note, Nix strings are automatically coerced
using this function. That is,
foo.bar = hm.gvariant.mkString "a string";
is equivalent to
foo.bar = "a string";
hm.gvariant.mkObjectpath (v: string)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant objectpath
value (GVariant
format string o
).
hm.gvariant.mkUchar (v: string)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant uchar
value (GVariant
format string y
).
hm.gvariant.mkInt16 (v: int)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant int16
value (GVariant
format string n
).
hm.gvariant.mkUint16 (v: int)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant uint16
value (GVariant
format string q
).
hm.gvariant.mkInt32 (v: int)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant int32
value (GVariant
format string i
). Note, Nix integers are automatically coerced
using this function. That is,
foo.bar = hm.gvariant.mkInt32 7;
is equivalent to
foo.bar = 7;
hm.gvariant.mkUint32 (v: int)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant uint32
value (GVariant
format string u
).
hm.gvariant.mkInt64 (v: int)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant int64
value (GVariant
format string x
).
hm.gvariant.mkUint64 (v: int)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant uint64
value (GVariant
format string t
).
hm.gvariant.mkDouble (v: double)
Takes a Nix value v
to a GVariant double
value (GVariant
format string d
). Note, Nix floats are automatically coerced
using this function. That is,
foo.bar = hm.gvariant.mkDouble 3.14;
is equivalent to
foo.bar = 3.14;
hm.gvariant.mkArray type elements
Builds a GVariant array containing the given list of elements,
where each element is a GVariant value of the given type
(GVariant format string a${type}
). The type
value can be
constructed using
hm.gvariant.type.string
(GVariant format string s
)
hm.gvariant.type.boolean
(GVariant format string b
)
hm.gvariant.type.uchar
(GVariant format string y
)
hm.gvariant.type.int16
(GVariant format string n
)
hm.gvariant.type.uint16
(GVariant format string q
)
hm.gvariant.type.int32
(GVariant format string i
)
hm.gvariant.type.uint32
(GVariant format string u
)
hm.gvariant.type.int64
(GVariant format string x
)
hm.gvariant.type.uint64
(GVariant format string t
)
hm.gvariant.type.double
(GVariant format string d
)
hm.gvariant.type.variant
(GVariant format string v
)
hm.gvariant.type.arrayOf type
(GVariant format string
a${type}
)
hm.gvariant.type.maybeOf type
(GVariant format string
m${type}
)
hm.gvariant.type.tupleOf types
(GVariant format string
(${lib.concatStrings types})
)
hm.gvariant.type.dictionaryEntryOf [keyType valueType]
(GVariant format string {${keyType}${valueType}}
)
where type
and types
are themselves a type and list of
types, respectively.
hm.gvariant.mkEmptyArray type
An alias of
hm.gvariant.mkArray type []
.
hm.gvariant.mkNothing type
Builds a GVariant maybe value (GVariant format string
m${type}
) whose (non-existent) element is of the given type.
The type
value is constructed as described for the
mkArray
function above.
hm.gvariant.mkJust element
Builds a GVariant maybe value (GVariant format string
m${element.type}
) containing the given GVariant element.
hm.gvariant.mkTuple elements
Builds a GVariant tuple containing the given list of elements, where each element is a GVariant value.
hm.gvariant.mkVariant element
Builds a GVariant variant (GVariant format string v
) which
contains the value of a GVariant element.
hm.gvariant.mkDictionaryEntry [key value]
Builds a GVariant dictionary entry containing the given list of
elements (GVariant format string {${key.type}${value.type}}
),
where each element is a GVariant value.
Contributions to Home Manager are very welcome. To make the process as smooth as possible for both you and the Home Manager maintainers we provide some guidelines that we ask you to follow. See Getting started for information on how to set up a suitable development environment and Guidelines for the actual guidelines.
This text is mainly directed at those who would like to make code contributions to Home Manager. If you just want to report a bug then first look among the already open issues, if you find one matching yours then feel free to comment on it to add any additional information you may have. If no matching issue exists then go to the new issue page and write a description of your problem. Include as much information as you can, ideally also include relevant excerpts from your Home Manager configuration.
Table of Contents
If you have not previously forked Home Manager then you need to do that first. Have a look at GitHub’s Fork a repo for instructions on how to do this.
Once you have a fork of Home Manager you should create a branch starting
at the most recent master
branch. Give your branch a reasonably
descriptive name. Commit your changes to this branch and when you are
happy with the result and it fulfills Guidelines then
push the branch to GitHub and create a pull
request.
Assuming your clone is at $HOME/devel/home-manager
then you can make
the home-manager
command use it by either
overriding the default path by using the -I
command line option:
$ home-manager -I home-manager=$HOME/devel/home-manager
or, if using flakes:
$ home-manager --override-input home-manager ~/devel/home-manager
or
changing the default path by ensuring your configuration includes
programs.home-manager.enable = true;
programs.home-manager.path = "$HOME/devel/home-manager";
and running home-manager switch
to activate the change.
Afterwards, home-manager build
and home-manager switch
will use
your cloned repository.
The first option is good if you only temporarily want to use your clone.
If your contribution satisfy the following rules then there is a good chance it will be merged without too much trouble. The rules are enforced by the Home Manager maintainers and to a lesser extent the Home Manager CI system.
If you are uncertain how these rules affect the change you would like to make then feel free to start a discussion in the #home-manager IRC channel, ideally before you start developing.
Your contribution should not cause another user’s existing configuration to break unless there is a very good reason and the change should be announced to the user through an assertion or similar.
Remember that Home Manager is used in many different environments and you should consider how your change may effect others. For example,
Does your change work for people that do not use NixOS? Consider other GNU/Linux distributions and macOS.
Does your change work for people whose configuration is built on one system and deployed on another system?
The master branch of Home Manager tracks the unstable channel of Nixpkgs, which may update package versions at any time. It is therefore important to consider how a package update may affect your code and try to reduce the risk of breakage.
The most effective way to reduce this risk is to follow the advice in Add only valuable options.
When creating a new module it is tempting to include every option
supported by the software. This is strongly discouraged. Providing
many options increases maintenance burden and risk of breakage
considerably. This is why only the most important software
options
should be modeled explicitly. Less important options should be
expressible through an extraConfig
escape hatch.
A good rule of thumb for the first implementation of a module is to only add explicit options for those settings that absolutely must be set for the software to function correctly. It follows that a module for software that provides sensible default values for all settings would require no explicit options at all.
If the software uses a structured configuration format like a JSON,
YAML, INI, TOML, or even a plain list of key/value pairs then consider
using a settings
option as described in Nix RFC
42.
If at all possible, make sure to add new tests and expand existing tests so that your change will keep working in the future. See Tests for more information about the Home Manager test suite.
All contributed code must pass the test suite.
Many code changes require changing the documentation as well. The documentation is written in Nixpkgs-flavoured Markdown. All text is hosted in Home Manager’s Git repository.
The HTML version of the manual containing both the module option descriptions and the documentation of Home Manager can be generated and opened by typing the following in a shell within a clone of the Home Manager Git repository:
$ nix-build -A docs.html
$ xdg-open ./result/share/doc/home-manager/index.html
When you have made changes to a module, it is a good idea to check that the man page version of the module options looks good:
$ nix-build -A docs.manPages
$ man ./result/share/man/man5/home-configuration.nix.5.gz
Every new module must include a named maintainer using the
meta.maintainers
attribute. If you are a user of a module that
currently lacks a maintainer then please consider adopting it.
If you are present in the nixpkgs maintainer list then you can use that
entry. If you are not then you can add yourself to
modules/lib/maintainers.nix
in the Home Manager project.
As a maintainer you are expected to respond to issues and pull-requests associated with your module.
Maintainers are encouraged to join the IRC or Matrix channel and participate when they have opportunity.
Make sure your code is formatted as described in Code Style. To maintain consistency throughout the project you are encouraged to browse through existing code and adopt its style also in new code.
Similar to Format your code we encourage a consistent commit message format as described in Commits.
If your contribution includes a change that should be communicated to users of Home Manager then you can add a news entry. The entry must be formatted as described in News.
When new modules are added a news entry should be included but you do not need to create this entry manually. The merging maintainer will create the entry for you. This is to reduce the risk of merge conflicts.
Home Manager includes a number of modules that are only usable on some of the supported platforms. The most common example of platform specific modules are those that define systemd user services, which only works on Linux systems.
If you add a module that is platform specific then make sure to include
a condition in the loadModule
function call. This will make the module
accessible only on systems where the condition evaluates to true
.
Similarly, if you are adding a news entry then it should be shown only to users that may find it relevant, see News for a description of conditional news.
The Home Manager project is covered by the MIT license and we can only accept contributions that fall under this license, or are licensed in a compatible way. When you contribute self written code and documentation it is assumed that you are doing so under the MIT license.
A potential gotcha with respect to licensing are option descriptions. Often it is convenient to copy from the upstream software documentation. When this is done it is important to verify that the license of the upstream documentation allows redistribution under the terms of the MIT license.
The commits in your pull request should be reasonably self-contained, that is, each commit should make sense in isolation. In particular, you will be asked to amend any commit that introduces syntax errors or similar problems even if they are fixed in a later commit.
The commit messages should follow the seven rules, except for "Capitalize the subject line". We also ask you to include the affected code component or module in the first line. That is, a commit message should follow the template
{component}: {description}
{long description}
where {component}
refers to the code component (or module) your change
affects, {description}
is a very brief description of your change, and
{long description}
is an optional clarifying description. As a rare
exception, if there is no clear component, or your change affects many
components, then the {component}
part is optional. See
example_title for a commit message that fulfills
these requirements.
The commit 69f8e47e9e74c8d3d060ca22e18246b7f7d988ef contains the commit message
starship: allow running in Emacs if vterm is used
The vterm buffer is backed by libvterm and can handle Starship prompts
without issues.
which ticks all the boxes necessary to be accepted in Home Manager.
Finally, when adding a new module, say programs/foo.nix
, we use the
fixed commit format foo: add module
. You can, of course, still include
a long description if you wish.
The code in Home Manager is formatted by the
nixfmt tool and the formatting is
checked in the pull request tests. Run the format
tool inside the
project repository before submitting your pull request.
Keep lines at a reasonable width, ideally 80 characters or less. This also applies to string literals.
We prefer lowerCamelCase
for variable and attribute names with the
accepted exception of variables directly referencing packages in Nixpkgs
which use a hyphenated style. For example, the Home Manager option
services.gpg-agent.enableSshSupport
references the gpg-agent
package
in Nixpkgs.
Home Manager includes a system for presenting news to the user. When making a change you, therefore, have the option to also include an associated news entry. In general, a news entry should only be added for truly noteworthy news. For example, a bug fix or new option does generally not need a news entry.
If you do have a change worthy of a news entry then please add one in
news.nix
but you should follow some basic guidelines:
The entry timestamp should be in ISO-8601 format having "+00:00" as time zone. For example, "2017-09-13T17:10:14+00:00". A suitable timestamp can be produced by the command
$ date --iso-8601=second --universal
The entry condition should be as specific as possible. For example, if you are changing or deprecating a specific option then you could restrict the news to those users who actually use this option.
Wrap the news message so that it will fit in the typical terminal, that is, at most 80 characters wide. Ideally a bit less.
Unlike commit messages, news will be read without any connection to the Home Manager source code. It is therefore important to make the message understandable in isolation and to those who do not have knowledge of the Home Manager internals. To this end it should be written in more descriptive, prose like way.
If you refer to an option then write its full attribute path. That is, instead of writing
The option 'foo' has been deprecated, please use 'bar' instead.
it should read
The option 'services.myservice.foo' has been deprecated, please
use 'services.myservice.bar' instead.
A new module, say foo.nix
, should always include a news entry that
has a message along the lines of
A new module is available: 'services.foo'.
If the module is platform specific, e.g., a service module using systemd, then a condition like
condition = hostPlatform.isLinux;
should be added. If you contribute a module then you don’t need to add this entry, the merger will create an entry for you.
Home Manager includes a basic test suite and it is highly recommended to include at least one test when adding a module. Tests are typically in the form of "golden tests" where, for example, a generated configuration file is compared to a known correct file.
It is relatively easy to create tests by modeling the existing tests,
found in the tests
project directory. For a full reference to the
functions available in test scripts, you can look at NMT’s
bash-lib.
The full Home Manager test suite can be run by executing
$ nix-shell --pure tests -A run.all
in the project root. List all test cases through
$ nix-shell --pure tests -A list
and run an individual test, for example alacritty-empty-settings
,
through
$ nix-shell --pure tests -A run.alacritty-empty-settings
However, those invocations will impurely source the system’s nixpkgs, and may cause failures. To run against the nixpkgs from the flake.lock, use instead e.g.
$ nix develop --ignore-environment .#all
Here is a collection of tools and extensions that relate to Home Manager. Note, these are maintained outside the regular Home Manager flow so quality and support may vary wildly. If you encounter problems then please raise them in the corresponding project, not as issues in the Home Manager tracker.
If you have made something interesting related to Home Manager then you are encouraged to create a PR that expands this chapter.
Table of Contents
xhmm — extra Home Manager modules
A collection of modules maintained by Anselm Schüler.
Stylix — System-wide colorscheming and typography
Configure your applications to get coherent color scheme and font.
Table of Contents
ca.desrt.dconf
or dconf.service
? Home Manager currently installs packages into the user environment,
precisely as if the packages were installed through nix-env --install
.
This means that you will get a collision error if your Home Manager
configuration attempts to install a package that you already have
installed manually, that is, packages that shows up when you run
nix-env --query
.
For example, imagine you have the hello
package installed in your
environment
$ nix-env --query
hello-2.10
and your Home Manager configuration contains
home.packages = [ pkgs.hello ];
Then attempting to switch to this configuration will result in an error similar to
$ home-manager switch
these derivations will be built:
/nix/store/xg69wsnd1rp8xgs9qfsjal017nf0ldhm-home-manager-path.drv
[…]
Activating installPackages
replacing old ‘home-manager-path’
installing ‘home-manager-path’
building path(s) ‘/nix/store/b5c0asjz9f06l52l9812w6k39ifr49jj-user-environment’
Wide character in die at /nix/store/64jc9gd2rkbgdb4yjx3nrgc91bpjj5ky-buildenv.pl line 79.
collision between ‘/nix/store/fmwa4axzghz11cnln5absh31nbhs9lq1-home-manager-path/bin/hello’ and ‘/nix/store/c2wyl8b9p4afivpcz8jplc9kis8rj36d-hello-2.10/bin/hello’; use ‘nix-env --set-flag priority NUMBER PKGNAME’ to change the priority of one of the conflicting packages
builder for ‘/nix/store/b37x3s7pzxbasfqhaca5dqbf3pjjw0ip-user-environment.drv’ failed with exit code 2
error: build of ‘/nix/store/b37x3s7pzxbasfqhaca5dqbf3pjjw0ip-user-environment.drv’ failed
The solution is typically to uninstall the package from the environment
using nix-env --uninstall
and reattempt the Home Manager generation
switch.
You could also opt to unistall all of the packages from your profile
with nix-env --uninstall '*'
.
Home Manager is only able to set session variables automatically if it manages your Bash, Z shell, or fish shell configuration. To enable such management you use programs.bash.enable, programs.zsh.enable, or programs.fish.enable.
If you don’t want to let Home Manager manage your shell then you will
have to manually source the
~/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh
file in an appropriate
way. In Bash and Z shell this can be done by adding
. "$HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh"
to your .profile
and .zshrc
files, respectively. The
hm-session-vars.sh
file should work in most Bourne-like shells. For
fish shell, it is possible to source it using the foreign-env
plugin
fenv source "$HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh" > /dev/null
A typical way to prepare a repository of configurations for multiple logins and machines is to prepare one "top-level" file for each unique combination.
For example, if you have two machines, called "kronos" and "rhea" on which you want to configure your user "jane" then you could create the files
kronos-jane.nix
,
rhea-jane.nix
, and
common.nix
in your repository. On the kronos and rhea machines you can then make
~jane/.config/home-manager/home.nix
be a symbolic link to the
corresponding file in your configuration repository.
The kronos-jane.nix
and rhea-jane.nix
files follow the format
{ ... }:
{
imports = [ ./common.nix ];
# Various options that are specific for this machine/user.
}
while the common.nix
file contains configuration shared across the two
logins. Of course, instead of just a single common.nix
file you can
have multiple ones, even one per program or service.
You can get some inspiration from the Post your home-manager home.nix file! Reddit thread.
ca.desrt.dconf
or dconf.service
? You are most likely trying to configure something that uses dconf but the DBus session is not aware of the dconf service. The full error you might get is
error: GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.ServiceUnknown: The name ca.desrt.dconf was not provided by any .service files
or
error: GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.systemd1.NoSuchUnit: Unit dconf.service not found.
The solution on NixOS is to add
programs.dconf.enable = true;
to your system configuration.
If you are using a stable version of Nixpkgs but would like to install some particular packages from Nixpkgs unstable – or some other channel – then you can import the unstable Nixpkgs and refer to its packages within your configuration. Something like
{ pkgs, config, ... }:
let
pkgsUnstable = import <nixpkgs-unstable> {};
in
{
home.packages = [
pkgsUnstable.foo
];
# …
}
should work provided you have a Nix channel called nixpkgs-unstable
.
You can add the nixpkgs-unstable
channel by running
$ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable nixpkgs-unstable
$ nix-channel --update
Note, the package will not be affected by any package overrides, overlays, etc.
By default Home Manager will install the package provided by your chosen
nixpkgs
channel but occasionally you might end up needing to change
this package. This can typically be done in two ways.
If the module provides a package
option, such as
programs.beets.package
, then this is the recommended way to
perform the change. For example,
programs.beets.package = pkgs.beets.override { pluginOverrides = { beatport.enable = false; }; };
See Nix pill 17
for more information on package overrides. Alternatively, if you want
to use the beets
package from Nixpkgs unstable, then a configuration like
{ pkgs, config, ... }:
let
pkgsUnstable = import <nixpkgs-unstable> {};
in
{
programs.beets.package = pkgsUnstable.beets;
# …
}
should work OK.
If no package
option is available then you can typically change
the relevant package using an
overlay.
For example, if you want to use the programs.skim
module but use
the skim
package from Nixpkgs unstable, then a configuration like
{ pkgs, config, ... }:
let
pkgsUnstable = import <nixpkgs-unstable> {};
in
{
programs.skim.enable = true;
nixpkgs.overlays = [
(self: super: {
skim = pkgsUnstable.skim;
})
];
# …
}
should work OK.