If set to true, desktops configured in `monitors` will be reset every time
the config is run.
If set to false, desktops will only be configured the first time the config is run.
This is useful if you want to dynamically add desktops and you don't want them
to be destroyed if you re-run `bspwmrc`.
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
* gtk: add cursor theme configuration
- Added the `cursorTheme` under the gtk module.
- Added tests for the gtk3 settings file generation, and renamed
the gtk2 unit test expected file for clarity.
- Added guard against generating a blank `gtk.css` when `cfg.extraCss`
is empty.
- Replaced `concatMapStrings` calls with `concatStringsSep`. The library function
`concatMapStrings` generates an intemediate list which is then passed to
`concatStringsSep`, As we are not performing other transformation except
the addition of newlines, a direct call to `concatStringsSep` is sufficient.
- Updated description of examples to be more general "~/.config" -> "$XDG_CONFIG_HOME".
- Update helper functions `toGtk3Ini` and `formatGtk2Option` to use the library
function `boolToString` and escape the separator in the key name.
* xcursor: delegate GTK cursor settings to gtk.cursorTheme
- Added deprecation warning for GTK settings in the `xsession.cursorTheme` module.
- Modified config section to use `gtk.cursorTheme` for GTK cursor settings.
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.
Previously, if a process inside a foot client triggered the OOM killer,
systemd would also kill the parent unit, namely the foot server.
This is not ideal if a user has a lot of clients attached, and it's
usually not the terminal emulator's fault that a process inside it has
ended up using all the available memory.
This patch moves both home.sessionVariables and
programs.zsh.sessionVariables from .zshrc to .zshenv. Additionally,
these two kinds of session variables will not be sourced more than
once to allow user-customized ones to take effect.
Before, session variables are in .zshrc, which causes non-interactive
shells to not be able to get those variables. For example, running a
command through SSH is in a non-interactive and non-login shell, which
suffers from this. With this patch, all kinds of shells can get
session variables.
The reason why these session variables are not moved to .zprofile is
that programs started by systemd user instances are not able to get
variables defined in that file. For example, GNOME
Terminal (gnome-terminal-server.service) is one of these programs and
doesn't get variables defined in .zprofile. As a result, the shells it
starts, which are interactive and non-login, do not get those
variables.
Fixes#2445
Related NixOS/nixpkgs#33219
Related NixOS/nixpkgs#45784
This file is not formatted before and is excluded by ./format, so I don't format it.
Currently translated at 78.5% (11 of 14 strings)
Translate using Weblate (Japanese)
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Co-authored-by: Narazaki Shuji <shujinarazaki@protonmail.com>
Translate-URL: https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/home-manager/cli/ja/
Translate-URL: https://hosted.weblate.org/projects/home-manager/modules/ja/
Translation: Home Manager/Home Manager CLI
Translation: Home Manager/Home Manager Modules
When an hook is defined, a side effect was the creation of the
${notmuchIni.database.path}/.notmuch/ directory by home-manager. If
the Xapian database does not exist yet but this .notmuch directory
exists, Notmuch is confused and throws an error when `notmuch new` is
run (while this should create the database the first time).
This commit changes the hooks paths to $XDG_CONFIG_HOME where Notmuch
expects them (see notmuch-config(1)) instead of inside the maildir
database directory.
It also moves the configuration where Notmuch expects it, but the
$NOTMUCH_CONFIG environment variable is kept for backward
compatibility.