Closes issue #1725.
This allows mpv module to be customized with support for more advanced
features than the `programs.mpv.scripts` current support. For example,
with this change now this is possible:
```nix
{
programs.mpv.package = (pkgs.wrapMpv (pkgs.mpv-unwrapped.override {
vapoursynthSupport = true;
}) {
extraMakeWrapperArgs = [
"--prefix" "LD_LIBRARY_PATH" ":" "${pkgs.vapoursynth-mvtools}/lib/vapoursynth"
];
});
}
```
Since `programs.mpv.package` doesn't necessary reflect the final
derivation anymore (see #1524), we introduce `programs.mpv.finalPackage`
that has the resulting derivation.
This includes 2 tests:
- One to check if everything is alright with mpv
- Other to validate our assertion that package and scripts can't be
passed both at the same time
* docs: document recent mpv module changes
* mpv: add thiagokokada as maintainer
We currently check `isPath` and `isString` on crxPath and version
respectively, which is
1. pointless because the module system already does such checks, and
2. wrong because isPath means path literal; a derivation therefore is
not a path.
mu-cfind is meant to search for contacts within your contacts database and the emails that you have sent/received. The use of the --personal flag in that command is meant to filter for only emails that use your email addresses (which are all the ones you specify with the ${myAddresses} variable. Disregard what I said in #1623 (comment).
--my-address=<my-email-address>
specifies that some e-mail addresses are 'my-address' (--my-address can be used multiple times).
This is used by mu cfind -- any e-mail address found in the address fields of a message which also
has <my-email-address> in one of its address fields is considered a personal e-mail address. This
allows you, for example, to filter out (mu cfind --personal) addresses which were merely seen in
mailing list messages.
To initialize the database with mu init, the ${myAddresses} is not required to be passed to successfully initialize the database, but it is heavily recommended to do so.
To see the difference, in a safe location, run mu init --maildir=<path>, then mu index. You'll notice that "personal addresses" returns <none>, although the database will still work. However, mu cfind --personal will fail (as the personal contacts don't exist). Then run mu init --maildir=<path> --my-address=<address>, then mu index. Then you'll be able to search for contacts using mu cfind --personal.
When setting `...sway.package = null`, the default bar configuration
would throw an error trying to use the bar from the null package.
Logic is added to use the bar from `pkgs.sway` instead of `cfg.package`
if it is null.
Fixes#1714
* neovim: write config in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/init.vim
instead of wrapping the configuration, which has sideeffects
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/55376
* fix: update test accordingly
I also made some modifications to the systemd service to match the [AUR version](https://aur.archlinux.org/cgit/aur.git/tree/goimapnotify@.service?h=goimapnotify) of `goimapnotify`. In particular, restarting is useful in case a network failure causes `imapnotify` to exit - that shouldn't mean that it stops trying when the network comes back up.
Previously, it was not possible to set an arbitrary tmux prefix since
CTRL was hardcoded in the module.
To avoid breaking existing configs, a new option was implemented that
conveniently uses the tmux terminology but defaults to null and does
not affect previous behavior when set to null.
The behavior for the shortcut option was not completely replicated,
i.e., it does not bind "b" to send-prefix but stick to the default of
the prefix binding sending prefix (C-b C-b instead of C-b b) and it
does not bind repetition of the prefix (C-b C-b) to `last-window`,
both of these bring the option closer to the default tmux
configuration.
Fixes#1237
Brave Browser is a chromium-based browser, too.
+ it use the same web store with Chromium and Google Chrome.
+ the machanism of installing extensions works, and it's verified on
my macOS box.
The current definition makes waybar wait for dbus.service, but that
never happens because dbus.service is started on demand by
dbus.socket.
Per systemd docs:
https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.service.html#Implicit%20Dependencies
- Services with Type=dbus set automatically acquire dependencies of
type Requires= and After= on dbus.socket.
- Socket activated services are automatically ordered after their
activating .socket units via an automatic After= dependency.
Services also pull in all .socket units listed in Sockets= via
automatic Wants= and After= dependencies.
Removing Requisite/After makes the service properly start for me,
simply specifying Type=dbus is enough.
See #1370