nixos-and-flakes-book/docs/nixos-with-flakes/start-using-home-manager.md

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Getting Started with Home Manager

As I mentioned earlier, NixOS can only manage system-level configuration. To manage user-level configuration in the Home directory, we need to install Home Manager.

According to the official Home Manager Manual, to install Home Manager as a module of NixOS, we first need to create /etc/nixos/home.nix. Here's an example of its contents:

{ config, pkgs, ... }:

{
  # TODO please change the username & home direcotry to your own
  home.username = "ryan";
  home.homeDirectory = "/home/ryan";

  # link the configuration file in current directory to the specified location in home directory
  # home.file.".config/i3/wallpaper.jpg".source = ./wallpaper.jpg;

  # link all files in `./scripts` to `~/.config/i3/scripts`
  # home.file.".config/i3/scripts" = {
  #   source = ./scripts;
  #   recursive = true;   # link recursively
  #   executable = true;  # make all files executable
  # };

  # encode the file content in nix configuration file directly
  # home.file.".xxx".text = ''
  #     xxx
  # '';

  # set cursor size and dpi for 4k monitor
  xresources.properties = {
    "Xcursor.size" = 16;
    "Xft.dpi" = 172;
  };

  # basic configuration of git, please change to your own
  programs.git = {
    enable = true;
    userName = "Ryan Yin";
    userEmail = "xiaoyin_c@qq.com";
  };

  # Packages that should be installed to the user profile.
  home.packages = with pkgs; [
    # here is some command line tools I use frequently
    # feel free to add your own or remove some of them

    neofetch
    nnn # terminal file manager

    # archives
    zip
    xz
    unzip
    p7zip

    # utils
    ripgrep # recursively searches directories for a regex pattern
    jq # A lightweight and flexible command-line JSON processor
    yq-go # yaml processer https://github.com/mikefarah/yq
    exa # A modern replacement for ls
    fzf # A command-line fuzzy finder

    # networking tools
    mtr # A network diagnostic tool
    iperf3
    dnsutils  # `dig` + `nslookup`
    ldns # replacement of `dig`, it provide the command `drill`
    aria2 # A lightweight multi-protocol & multi-source command-line download utility
    socat # replacement of openbsd-netcat
    nmap # A utility for network discovery and security auditing
    ipcalc  # it is a calculator for the IPv4/v6 addresses

    # misc
    cowsay
    file
    which
    tree
    gnused
    gnutar
    gawk
    zstd
    gnupg

    # nix related
    #
    # it provides the command `nom` works just like `nix`
    # with more details log output
    nix-output-monitor

    # productivity
    hugo # static site generator
    glow # markdown previewer in terminal

    btop  # replacement of htop/nmon
    iotop # io monitoring
    iftop # network monitoring

    # system call monitoring
    strace # system call monitoring
    ltrace # library call monitoring
    lsof # list open files

    # system tools
    sysstat
    lm_sensors # for `sensors` command
    ethtool
    pciutils # lspci
    usbutils # lsusb
  ];

  # starship - an customizable prompt for any shell
  programs.starship = {
    enable = true;
    # custom settings
    settings = {
      add_newline = false;
      aws.disabled = true;
      gcloud.disabled = true;
      line_break.disabled = true;
    };
  };

  # alacritty - a cross-platform, GPU-accelerated terminal emulator
  programs.alacritty = {
    enable = true;
    # custom settings
    settings = {
      env.TERM = "xterm-256color";
      font = {
        size = 12;
        draw_bold_text_with_bright_colors = true;
      };
      scrolling.multiplier = 5;
      selection.save_to_clipboard = true;
    };
  };

  programs.bash = {
    enable = true;
    enableCompletion = true;
    # TODO add your cusotm bashrc here
    bashrcExtra = ''
      export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/bin:$HOME/.local/bin:$HOME/go/bin"
    '';

    # set some aliases, feel free to add more or remove some
    shellAliases = {
      k = "kubectl";
      urldecode = "python3 -c 'import sys, urllib.parse as ul; print(ul.unquote_plus(sys.stdin.read()))'";
      urlencode = "python3 -c 'import sys, urllib.parse as ul; print(ul.quote_plus(sys.stdin.read()))'";
    };
  };

  # 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 can update home Manager without changing this value. See
  # the home Manager release notes for a list of state version
  # changes in each release.
  home.stateVersion = "23.05";

  # Let home Manager install and manage itself.
  programs.home-manager.enable = true;
}

After adding /etc/nixos/home.nix, you need to import this new configuration file in /etc/nixos/flake.nix to make use of it, use the following command to generate an example in the current folder for reference:

nix flake new example -t github:nix-community/home-manager#nixos

After adjusting the parameters, the content of /etc/nixos/flake.nix is as follows:

{
  description = "NixOS configuration";

  inputs = {
    nixpkgs.url = "github:nixos/nixpkgs/nixos-unstable";
    home-manager.url = "github:nix-community/home-manager";
    home-manager.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
  };

  outputs = inputs@{ nixpkgs, home-manager, ... }: {
    nixosConfigurations = {
      # TODO please change the hostname to your own
      nixos-test = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem {
        system = "x86_64-linux";
        modules = [
          ./configuration.nix

          # make home-manager as a module of nixos
          # so that home-manager configuration will be deployed automatically when executing `nixos-rebuild switch`
          home-manager.nixosModules.home-manager
          {
            home-manager.useGlobalPkgs = true;
            home-manager.useUserPackages = true;

            # TODO replace ryan with your own username
            home-manager.users.ryan = import ./home.nix;

            # Optionally, use home-manager.extraSpecialArgs to pass arguments to home.nix
          }
        ];
      };
    };
  };
}

Then run sudo nixos-rebuild switch to apply the configuration, and home-manager will be installed automatically.

After the installation, all user-level packages and configuration can be managed through /etc/nixos/home.nix. When running sudo nixos-rebuild switch, the configuration of home-manager will be applied automatically. (It's not necessary to run home-manager switch manually!)

To find the options we can use in home.nix, referring to the following documents: