nix-conf/home.nix
2023-05-28 18:34:33 +05:30

117 lines
3.6 KiB
Nix

{ config, pkgs, ... }:
{
# Home Manager needs a bit of information about you and the
# paths it should manage.
home.username = "user";
home.homeDirectory = "/home/user";
programs.home-manager.enable = true;
# 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 should not change this value, even if you update Home Manager. If you do
# want to update the value, then make sure to first check the Home Manager
# release notes.
home.stateVersion = "22.11"; # Please read the comment before changing.
# Allow non-free packages
nixpkgs.config.allowUnfree = true;
nixpkgs.config.joypixels.acceptLicense = true;
# The home.packages option allows you to install Nix packages into your
# environment.
home.packages = with pkgs; [
# # Adds the 'hello' command to your environment. It prints a friendly
# # "Hello, world!" when run.
# pkgs.hello
# # It is sometimes useful to fine-tune packages, for example, by applying
# # overrides. You can do that directly here, just don't forget the
# # parentheses. Maybe you want to install Nerd Fonts with a limited number of
# # fonts?
# (pkgs.nerdfonts.override { fonts = [ "FantasqueSansMono" ]; })
# # You can also create simple shell scripts directly inside your
# # configuration. For example, this adds a command 'my-hello' to your
# # environment:
# (pkgs.writeShellScriptBin "my-hello" ''
# echo "Hello, ${config.home.username}!"
# '')
xsel wget neofetch htop oh-my-zsh git chromium plasma5Packages.qtstyleplugin-kvantum kdeconnect
bat microsoft-edge vivaldi vivaldi-ffmpeg-codecs x264 nerdfonts joypixels rustc cargo unzip ocs-url
nextcloud-client duf neovim foliate mpv obsidian dino aria2 bitwarden kitty-themes p7zip
tdesktop libreoffice-fresh jetbrains-mono
];
nixpkgs.config.permittedInsecurePackages = [
"electron-21.4.0"
];
programs.bash = {
enable = false;
bashrcExtra = ''
. ~/.bashrc
'';
};
programs.zsh = {
enable = true;
enableCompletion = true;
enableAutosuggestions = true;
enableSyntaxHighlighting = true;
oh-my-zsh = {
enable = true;
theme = "ys";
plugins = ["git" "colored-man-pages" "extract" "sudo"];
};
};
programs.kitty = {
enable = true;
extraConfig = "include ~/.config/kitty/current-theme.conf
font_family JetBrainsMono Nerd Font
bold_font auto
italic_font auto
bold_italic_font auto
wayland_titlebar_color system
hide_window_decorations no
linux_display_server x11
confirm_os_window_close 0
";
};
# programs.neovim = {
# enable = true;
# defaultEditor = true;
# };
# Home Manager is pretty good at managing dotfiles. The primary way to manage
# plain files is through 'home.file'.
#home.file = {
# # Building this configuration will create a copy of 'dotfiles/screenrc' in
# # the Nix store. Activating the configuration will then make '~/.screenrc' a
# # symlink to the Nix store copy.
# ".screenrc".source = dotfiles/screenrc;
# # You can also set the file content immediately.
# ".gradle/gradle.properties".text = ''
# org.gradle.console=verbose
# org.gradle.daemon.idletimeout=3600000
# '';
#};
# You can also manage environment variables but you will have to manually
# source
#
# ~/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh
#
# or
#
# /etc/profiles/per-user/user/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh
#
# if you don't want to manage your shell through Home Manager.
}