Curiously the `who` command sometimes does not list logged-in users,
resulting in systemd not being reloaded. Instead we use
systemctl --user is-system-running
to more directly detect whether systemd is running.
The preferred method of theming rofi is now to use "rasi" theme files.
This commit therefore downplays the colors option and introduces the
theme option.
This is a NixOS module that is intended to be imported into a NixOS
system configuration. It allows the system users to be set up directly
from the system configuration.
The actual profile switch is performed by a oneshot systemd unit per
configured user that acts much like the regular `home-manager switch`
command.
With this implementation, the NixOS module does not work properly with
the `nixos-rebuild build-vm` command. This can be solved by using the
`users.users.<name?>.packages` option to install packages but this
does not work flawlessly with certain Nixpkgs packages. In particular,
for programs using the Qt libraries.
Adds a service for the Stalonetray system tray.
Configured through a 'config' attribute set, which writes space
separated key value pairs on successive lines to `~/.stalonetrayrc`.
Very simple module for hg based on programs.git, and is intended to have
compatible options. For simple setups, a user should be able to write
something like:
{...}:
let vcsconfig = {
enable = true;
userName = "John Smith";
userEmail = "js@example.com";
ignores = [ "*.swp" "*~" ];
};
in
{
programs.git = vcsconfig // {...extra git config...};
programs.mercurial = vcsconfig // {...extra hg confg...};
}
For this reason, the ignore options are `ignores` for `syntax: glob`
and `ignoresRegexp` for `syntax: regexp` so that simple glob ignores
can (very likely) be shared with a git config, despite regular
expressions being the default for mercurial.
This variable adds some extra flexibility in constructing the
`~/.bashrc` file. Currently the option is hidden from public
documentation since the option name is provisional.
In certain cases it makes sense to override the target username and
home directory. In particular, if you're building a configuration for
a remote profile.