workspace 10 is part of upstream's default config, but was missing in home-manager. The initial "sway: add module" PR (02d6040003) went through multiple iterations and had workspace 10 included for a brief moment. Until the author removed it in a force-push commenting > Have removed the last change which added bound ${modifer}+0 to workspace number 10 as this messed up workspace numbering in sway. The reason might have been, that sway used to sort the workspaces in the order they appeared in the config. Attribute sets in nix are sorted, but not "naturally sorted", meaning `bindsym Mod1+0 workspace number 10` comes before `bindsym Mod1+0 workspace number 1`. It's unclear if that's what really happened. A workaround would have been to use `lib.lists.naturalSort` in `keybindingsStr`. But I cannot reproduce this anymore in any way. I assume this has been fixed many years ago by now. upstream config:020a572ed6/config.in (L113-L134)
Home Manager using Nix
This project provides a basic system for managing a user environment using the Nix package manager together with the Nix libraries found in Nixpkgs. It allows declarative configuration of user specific (non-global) packages and dotfiles.
Usage
Before attempting to use Home Manager please read the warning below.
For a systematic overview of Home Manager and its available options, please see:
If you would like to contribute to Home Manager, then please have a look at "Contributing" in the manual.
Releases
Home Manager is developed against nixpkgs-unstable branch, which often causes
it to contain tweaks for changes/packages not yet released in stable NixOS.
To avoid breaking users' configurations, Home Manager is released in branches
corresponding to NixOS releases (e.g. release-23.11). These branches get
fixes, but usually not new modules. If you need a module to be backported, then
feel free to open an issue.
Words of warning
Unfortunately, it is quite possible to get difficult to understand errors when working with Home Manager. You should therefore be comfortable using the Nix language and the various tools in the Nix ecosystem.
If you are not very familiar with Nix but still want to use Home Manager then you are strongly encouraged to start with a small and very simple configuration and gradually make it more elaborate as you learn.
In some cases Home Manager cannot detect whether it will overwrite a previous manual configuration. For example, the Gnome Terminal module will write to your dconf store and cannot tell whether a configuration that it is about to be overwritten was from a previous Home Manager generation or from manual configuration.
Home Manager targets NixOS unstable and NixOS version 23.11 (the current stable version), it may or may not work on other Linux distributions and NixOS versions.
Also, the home-manager tool does not explicitly support rollbacks at the
moment so if your home directory gets messed up you'll have to fix it yourself.
See the rollbacks section for instructions on how to manually perform a
rollback.
Now when your expectations have been built up and you are eager to try all this out you can go ahead and read the rest of this text.
Contact
You can chat with us on IRC in the channel #home-manager on OFTC. There is also a Matrix room, which is bridged to the IRC channel.
Installation
Home Manager can be used in three primary ways:
-
Using the standalone
home-managertool. For platforms other than NixOS and Darwin, this is the only available choice. It is also recommended for people on NixOS or Darwin that want to manage their home directory independently of the system as a whole. See "Standalone installation" in the manual for instructions on how to perform this installation. -
As a module within a NixOS system configuration. This allows the user profiles to be built together with the system when running
nixos-rebuild. See "NixOS module" in the manual for a description of this setup. -
As a module within a nix-darwin system configuration. This allows the user profiles to be built together with the system when running
darwin-rebuild. See "nix-darwin module" in the manual for a description of this setup.
Home Manager provides both the channel-based setup and the flake-based one. See Nix Flakes for a description of the flake-based setup.
Translations
Home Manager has basic support for internationalization through gettext. The translations are hosted by Weblate. If you would like to contribute to the translation effort then start by going to the Home Manager Weblate project.
License
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.