As my NixOS configuration kept growing, I noticed that I don't need home-manager as much as I did before. A lot of what I need is just a way to map nix attrsets to the program's respective configuration format, which is something that I can now do myself, as my nix knowledge got more extensive. After all of this, I decided to completely get rid of home-manager, and switch to a simpler solution called hjem, which just lets me write files to my home directory that are automatically symlinked using `systemd-tmpfiles`. This allows me to simplify my configuration, remove the separation between NixOS and home-manager modules, and cut my eval times by quite a lot (which allows for faster `nixos-rebuild switch`!).
30 lines
737 B
Nix
30 lines
737 B
Nix
{
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lib,
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pkgs,
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osConfig,
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...
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}: {
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config = lib.mkIf osConfig.local.profiles.desktop.enable {
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programs.tmux = {
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enable = true;
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prefix = "C-space";
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escapeTime = 10;
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clock24 = true;
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keyMode = "vi";
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mouse = true;
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baseIndex = 1;
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extraConfig = ''
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set-option -a terminal-features "''${TERM}:RGB"
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bind c new-window -c "#{pane_current_path}"
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bind '"' split-window -v -c "#{pane_current_path}"
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bind '%' split-window -h -c "#{pane_current_path}"
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bind C-k clear-history
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'';
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plugins = with pkgs; [
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tmuxPlugins.vim-tmux-navigator
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tmuxPlugins.yank
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];
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};
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programs.fzf.tmux.enableShellIntegration = true;
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};
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}
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