nnn is a terminal file manager.
It is configured mostly using environment variables, so the way I
found it to avoid needing to write either shell specific code or
using `home.sessionVariables` (that would need to make the user
relogin at every configuration change) is to wrap the program using
`wrapProgram`.
This is to better integrate with more advanced shell history managers
like McFly and Atuin. By initializing fzf first, we allow the history
managers to steal the C-r key binding from fzf.
This commit adds a module for configuring atuin, a replacement shell
history program.
The module adds options for generating atuin's `config.toml` from Nix,
and options to enable atuin's integration for bash and zsh
(which will rebind history keys to open the atuin history).
Bottom is a cross-platform graphical process/system monitor with a
customizable interface and a multitude of features.
Two unit tests were added validate the module behavior for an empty
configuration and the example configuration.
At the moment, only the inbox of each mail account is added to neomutt.
This inbox is always called "Inbox", so if you configure multiple
accounts, it is hard to know which one is which.
This change allows the user to specify a display name per account that
uses `named-mailboxes` under the hood.
Additionally this change now allows to add other folders than the inbox,
for example the Trash, Spam or Drafts folders to be added on a per-account
basis. Using extraOptions is not possible here, as those are lazily
loaded on mailbox open and thus would appear at the bottom and not sorted
by account.
This commit also changes the default sidebar format string to use %D
instead of %B because %B will ignore named mailboxes and show the folder
name instead.
When the 'fields' setting is not set in htoprc, the htop program won't read any
of the settings. Provide a default value for fields in case it's not explicitly
set by the user.
Expose the generated viml config, this has 2 advantages:
1/ user can choose to write the generated config to a file of its choice
2/ the user can prepend/append to the config before writing it
xdg.configFile."nvim/init.vim".text = ''
" prepend some config
${programs.neovim.generatedConfigViml}
" append some config
'';
NOTE: this was already possible with
xdg.configFile."nvim/init.vim" = mkMerge [
(mkBefore {
text = ''
" prepend some config
'';
})
(mkAfter {
text = ''
" append some config
'';
})
]
This adds two new options: 'programs.neovim.coc.{enable,settings}`.
These settings offer a simple interface over `xdg.configFile."nvim/coc-settings.json`,
using the standard Nix' syntax instead of a multiline string.
With
programs.taskwarrior.dataLocation = /absolute/path
(outside of $HOME) the current implementation wrongly creates
$HOME/absolute/path (due to how home.file is implemented).
Since taskwarrior creates the dataLocation automatically on first run,
there is actually no need for HM to create that directory.
Additional benefit, the .keep symlink that HM creates as a side-effect
no longer appears in the taskwarrior data directory.
Fixes#2207.
Before, loading a module would be guarded by an optional platform
condition. This made it possible to avoid loading and evaluating a
module if it did not support the host platform.
Unfortunately, this made it impossible to share a single configuration
between GNU/Linux and Darwin hosts, which some wish to do.
This removes the conditional load and instead inserts host platform
assertions in the modules that are platform specific.
Fixes#1906