Before this change, a warning would be printed to the console if you
tried to manage a file in a path containing a space. For example,
`vscodium`'s `userSettings` file on Darwin is at
`~/Library/Application Support/VSCodium/User/settings.json`.
Rationale:
As of release 1.1.2[1], the configuration ini file supports
declaration of the `[main]` header as an alternative to global
properties by enumerating all sections and mapping each to the
respective parsing function. Global properties will still be parsed
correctly by fnott however generation adds unnecessary complexity to
the module. This commit removes the need for global properties
generation.
Changes:
- Fixed the FIXME at L118.
- Cleaned up unneeded let bindings.
- Changed the generation method to use the `pkgs.formats.ini` from
pkgs-lib instead of the raw `generators` library. This was done for
consistency and clarity as the `pkgs.formats.ini` is still required
for type declaration and uses `generators` internally.
- Removed `global-properties` testcase.
- Updated `example-settings` testcase.
[1] - https://codeberg.org/dnkl/fnott/releases/tag/1.1.2
This commit introduces the `nixpkgs-disabled` module, that is
basically a mock of `nixpkgs` module where any value different from
`null` will cause an assertion error.
This is to help debugging cases where `home-manager.useGlobalPkgs` is
set to `true` and `nixpkgs.*` options are being used.
Nowadays this returns the following error:
```
error: The option `home-manager.users.<user>.nixpkgs` does not exist.
```
This will change too:
```
error: `nixpkgs` options are disabled when `home-manager.useGlobalPkgs` is enabled.
```
That will direct the user to the correct solution (either removing
`nixpkgs` or disable `home-manager.useGlobalPkgs`).
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).
* screen-locker: Make xautolock optional, reorganize options
xautolock isn't really needed to trigger xss-lock on the basis of time
since the built-in screensaver functionality of X serves as one of the
event sources for xss-lock. Keeping it around and defaulting to
"enabled" to avoid unexpected breakage.
Also shuffled around the options to submodules for xss-lock and
xautolock to get rid of prefixes in option names and to make
enableDetectSleep a bit clearer.
* screen-locker: update maintainership
* tests/screen-locker: Stub i3lock and xss-lock
* screen-locker: add package options for xss-lock and xautolock
kanshi configurations can have more than one exec statement in a
profile. This change allows services.kanshi.profiles.<name>.exec to be
a list of strings rather than a single string.
Specifically, instead of
services.dbus.packages = with pkgs; [ gnome.dconf ];
we now recommend
programs.dconf.enable = true;
which does the same and more.
Currently, when a custom path is set for any of the XDG base
directories (i.e XDG_DATA_HOME, XDG_CONFIG_HOME, ...), the path will
be coerced into a string when consumed by other options such as
xdg.configFile et al. This causes the the given path to be copied to
the nix store which in the case of xdg.configFile et al, translate to
the file being written there as it is a absolute path.
Interestingly, the default base directories all work as intended as
they are encoded as a string.
This commit converts the option to a string regardless of whether it
is a primitive path or a string encoded path. This allows downstream
consumers to use the base directories in arbitrary way without
accidentally copying the content of the directory to the store. It is
implemented in a similar manner as how home.homeDirectory undergoes
string conversion.
The existing file-attr-name test was modified to test also custom xdg
base directories, and the home.file generation test was removed as
there is a dedicated test for this case in the files module. The test
case was renamed to file-gen to better reflect the new scope.
Make `gpgconf` only perform an import from derivation when the GPG
`homedir` is set to a non-default value, which probably isn't the case
for most users.