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README.org

Dotfiles

Immutable NixOS dotfiles.

/chris/dotfiles/src/commit/f86d9c277757919942b606690e1b2a9c20533bc7/docs/images/desktop-example.png

Built for Life, Liberty, and the Open Road.

  • 100% Immutable

  • 100% Declarative

  • 100% Reproducible

Introduction

This is my personal configuration for GNU/Linux systems. It enables a consistent experience and computing environment across all of my machines. This project is written with GNU/Emacs, leveraging its capabilities for Literate Programming, a technique where programs are written in a natural language, such as English, interspersed with snippets of code to describe a software project.

This file is controlled by /etc/dotfiles/README.org

Getting Started

  1. Download the latest version of NixOS

  2. Partition your drives and mount the file system

  3. Clone the project git clone git@git.chrishayward.xyz:chris/dotfiles /mnt/etc/dotfiles

  4. Load the default shell nix-shell /mnt/etc/dotfiles

  5. Install the system sudo nixos-install --flake /mnt/etc/dotfiles#nixos

  6. Reboot, login and start a graphical system startx

Making Changes

The nixos-rebuild command updates the system so that it corresponds to the configuration specified in the module. It builds the new system in /nix/store/, runs the activation scripts, and restarts and system services (if needed). The command has one required argument, which specifies the desired operation:

Command Description
boot Build the new configuration and make it the boot default, without activation
test Build and activate the new configuration, without adding it to the boot menu
switch Build and activate the new configuration, making it the new boot default
build Build the new configuration, without activation, nor adding it to the boot menu
build-vm Build a script that starts a virtual machine with the desired configuration

After making changes to the configuration the switch command will build and activate a new configuration.

# Build and activate a new configuration.
sudo nixos-rebuild switch --flake $FLAKE#$HOSTNAME

Instead of building a new configuration, it's possible to rollback to a previous generation using the nixos-rebuild command, by supplying the --rollback argument.

# Rollback to the previous generation.
sudo nixos-rebuild switch --rollback

Docker Container

It's possible to use parts of this configuration using a Docker container. By default, sandboxing is turned off inside of the container, even though it's enabled in new installations. This can lead to differences between derivations built inside containers, versus those built without any containerization. This is especially true if a derivation relies on sandboxing to block sideloading of dependencies.

Install from the command line: docker pull ghcr.io/chayward1/dotfiles:main

# <<file-warning>>

# Derive from the official image.
FROM nixos/nix

# Setup the default environment.
WORKDIR /etc/dotfiles
COPY . .

# Load the default system shell.
RUN nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shell.nix

Operating System

NixOS is a purely functional Linux distribution built on top of the Nix Package Manager. It uses a declarative configuration language to define entire computer systems, and allows reliable system upgrades and rollbacks. NixOS also has tool dedicated to DevOps and deployment tasks, and makes it trivial to share development environments.

# <<file-warning>>
{
  description = "<<description>>";

  inputs = {
    <<os-nixpkgs>> 
    <<os-home-manager>>
    <<os-emacs-overlay>>
    <<os-nixos-hardware>>
    <<os-nix-on-droid>>
  };

  outputs = inputs @ { self, nixpkgs, nixpkgs-unstable, ... }: {
    nixosConfigurations = {
      <<host-default>>
      <<host-acernitro>>
      <<host-raspberry>>
      <<host-homecloud>>
      <<host-android>>
    };
  };
}

Nixpkgs

Nixpkgs is a collection of over 60,000 software packages that can be installed with the Nix Package Manager. Two main branches are offered:

  1. The current stable release

  2. The Unstable branch following the latest development

nixpkgs.url = "nixpkgs/nixos-unstable";
nixpkgs-unstable.url = "nixpkgs/master";

Home Manager

Home Manager provides a basic system for managing user environments using the Nix Package Manager together with the Nix libraries found in Nixpkgs. It allows declarative configuration of user specific (non-global) packages and files.

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

Emacs Overlay

Adding the Emacs Overlay1 extends the GNU/Emacs2 package set to contain the latest versions, and daily generations from popular package sources, including the needed dependencies to run GNU/Emacs2 as a Window Manager.

emacs-overlay.url = "github:nix-community/emacs-overlay";

NixOS Hardware

NixOS Hardware3 is a collection of NixOS4 modules covering specific hardware quirks. Unlike the channel, this will update the git repository on a rebuild. However, it's easy to pin particular revisions for more stability.

nixos-hardware.url = "github:nixos/nixos-hardware";

Nix On Droid

Nix On Droid5 is a deployment of the Nix6 Package Manager on Android, in a single-click installable package. It does not require root, user namespace support, or disabling SELinux, but relies on proot. It has no relation to the Termux distribution.

nix-on-droid.url = "github:t184256/nix-on-droid/master";
nix-on-droid.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";

Development Shells

The command nix-shell7 will build the dependencies of the specified derivation, but not the derivation itself. It will then start an interactive shell in which all environment variables defined by the derivation path have been set to their corresponding values.

Import this shell with nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shell.nix.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:

with pkgs;

let
  nixBin = writeShellScriptBin "nix" ''
    ${nixFlakes}/bin/nix --option experimental-features "nix-command flakes" "$@"
  '';

in mkShell {
  buildInputs = [
    git
  ];
  shellHook = ''
    export FLAKE="$(pwd)"
    export PATH="$FLAKE/bin:${nixBin}/bin:$PATH"
  '';
}

Go

Go8 is an open-source programming language that makes it easy to build simple, reliable, and efficient software. It's statically typed and compiled programming language. It's syntactically similar to C, but with memory safety, garbage collection, structural typing, and CSP-style concurrency.

Import this shell with nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shells/go.nix

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:

with pkgs;
mkShell {
  buildInputs = [
    go
    gopls

    # FIXME: Broken on nixpkgs/unstable.
    # protoc-gen-go
    # protoc-gen-go-grpc
  ];
  shellHook = ''
    export GO111MODULE=on
    export GOPATH=$XDG_DATA_HOME/go
    export PATH=$GOPATH/bin:$PATH
  '';
}

Rust

Rust9 is a multi-paradigm programming language designed for performance and safety, especially safe concurrency. It is syntactically similar to C++, but can garantee memory safety by using a borrow checker to validate references. Rust9 achieves memory safety without garbage collection, and reference counting is optional.

Import this shell with nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shells/rust.nix.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:

with pkgs;
mkShell {
  buildInputs = [
    rustup
  ];
  shellHook = ''
    export RUSTUP_HOME="$XDG_DATA_HOME/rustup"
    export CARGO_HOME="$XDG_DATA_HOME/cargo"
    export PATH="$CARGO_HOME/bin:$PATH"
  '';
}

Node

Node.js10 is an open-source, cross-platform, back-end JavaScript runtime environment that runs on the V8 engine, and executes JavaScript code outside of a web browser. Node.js10 lets developers user JavaScript to write command line tools, and for server-side scripting to produce dynamic web page content.

Import this shell with nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shells/node.nix.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:

with pkgs;
mkShell {
  buildInputs = [
    nodejs
    yarn
  ];
  shellHook = ''
    export NPM_CONFIG_TMP="$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/npm"
    export NPM_CONFIG_CACHE="$XDG_CACHE_HOME/npm"
    export NPM_CACHE_PREFIX="$XDG_CACHE_HOME/npm"
    export PATH="$(yarn global bin):$PATH"
  '';
}

Java

OpenJDK11 is a free and open-source implementation of the Java Platform, Standard Edition. It is the result of an effort Sun Microsystems began in 2006. The implementation is licensed under the GNU General Public License Version 2 with a linking exception.

Import this shell with nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shells/java.nix.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:

with pkgs;
mkShell {
  buildInputs = [
    # openjdk8  # Legacy Java 8 VM.
    # openjdk11 # Current LTS version of OpenJDK.
    openjdk14   # Current version of OpenJDK.
  ];
  shellHook = ''
  '';
}

gRPC

gRPC12 is a modern open-source, high-performance Remote Procedure Call (RPC) framework that can run in any environment. It can efficiently connect services in and across data centres with pluggable support for load balancing, tracing, health checking, and authentication.

Import this shell with nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shells/grpc.nix.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:

with pkgs;
mkShell {
  buildInputs = [
    grpc
    grpcui
    grpcurl

    # FIXME: Broken on nixpkgs/unstable.
    # grpc-tools
  ];
  shellHook = ''
  '';
}

C/C++

C13 is a general-purpose, procedural computer programming language support structured programming, lexical variable scope, and recursion. It has a static type system, and by design provides constructs that map efficiently to typical machine instructions. C++14 is a general-purpose programming language created as an extension of the C13 programming language.

Import this shell with nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shells/cc.nix.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:

with pkgs;
mkShell {
  buildInputs = [
    gdb
    ccls
    cmake
    gnumake
    gcc-unwrapped
  ];
  shellHook = ''
  '';
}

Python

Python15 is an interpreted high-level, general-purpose programming language. Its design philosophy emphasizes code readability, with its notable use of significant indentation. Its language constructs, as well as its object-oriented approach aim to help programmers write clear, logical, code for small and large projects.

Import this shell with nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shells/python.nix

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:

with pkgs;
mkShell {
  buildInputs = [
    python38Packages.pip
    python38Packages.pip-tools
    python38Packages.pyls-mypy
    python38Packages.pyls-isort
    python38Packages.pyls-black
  ];
  shellHook = ''
  '';
}

Docker

Compose16 is a tool for defining and running multi-container Docker17 applications. With Compose16, you use a YAML file to configure your application services. Then, with a single command, you create and start all of the services from your configuration.

Machine18 is a tool that lets you install Docker Engine on virtual hosts, and manage the hosts with docker-machine commands. You can use Machine18 to create hosts on your local box, company network, data center, or on any cloud provider.

Import this shell with nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shells/docker.nix

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:

with pkgs;
mkShell {
  buildInputs = [
    docker-compose
    docker-machine
  ];
  shellHook = ''
  '';
}

Heroku

Heroku19 is a cloud platform as a service supporting several programming languages. One of the first cloud platforms, Heroku19 has been in development since June 2007, when it supported only the Ruby programming language. It now supports Java, Node.js, Scala, Clojure, Python, PHP, and Go.

Import this shell with nix-shell /etc/dotfiles/shells/heroku.nix

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:

with pkgs;
mkShell {
  buildInputs = [
    heroku
  ];
  shellHook = ''
  '';
}

Host Configurations

NixOS4 typically stores the current machine configuration in /etc/nixos/configuration.nix. In this project, this file is stored in /etc/dotfiles/hosts/$HOSTNAME/..., and imported, along with the generated hardware configurations. This ensures that multiple host machines can share the same modules, and generating new host definitions is trivial. It also makes it easier to share common configurations amongst all of the hosts, such as with pre-configured wireless networking:

networking.wireless.networks = {
  MyWiFi_5C1870 = {
    priority = 3;
    pskRaw = "409b3c85fef1c5737f284d2f82f20dc6023e41804e862d4fa26265ef8193b326";
  };
  BELL182 = {
    priority = 2;
    pskRaw = "8b3c114c695c5013bbcf5fc0af781c7872f95c34e2cceb31afa7bfc1adf66245";
  };
  SM-G975W3034 = {
    priority = 1;
    pskRaw = "74835d96a98ca2c56ffe4eaf92223f8a555168b59ec2bb22b1e46b2a333adc80";
  };
};

It's helpful to add the machine hostnames to the networking configuration, so I can refer to another host across the network by name. Some devices that can have more than one IP (WIFI / Ethernet) will have the wireless hostname suffixed:

networking.hosts = {
  "192.168.3.105" = [ "gamingpc" ];
  "192.168.3.163" = [ "acernitro" ];
  "192.168.3.182" = [ "raspberry" ];
  "192.168.3.183" = [ "homecloud" ];
};

Setting up new machines, especially headless ones like the Raspberry Pi Zero, can be difficult with NixOS. I find it easier to setup automatic network configuration, and wait for the machine to appear on the network. This is complimented with a pre-authorized SSH key, making it simple to connect and complete the installation headlessly.

users.users.chris.openssh.authorizedKeys.keys = [
  "ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIO4wka/LfG3pto15DIm9LIRbb6rWr7/ipCRiCdAKSlY4 chris@chrishayward.xyz"
];

Default

The default host, built using QEMU20, a free and open-source emulator that can perform hardware virtualization. It features a lightweight system optimized for development, running GNU/Emacs2 + EXWM21 as the graphical environment.

nixos = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem {
  system = "x86_64-linux";
  specialArgs = { inherit inputs; };
  modules = [
    ./hosts/nixos
    <<module-x11>>
    <<module-ssh>>
    <<module-flakes>>
    <<module-cachix>>
    <<module-home-manager>>
  ];
};

Deploy this configuration with nixos-rebuild switch --flake /etc/dotfiles/#nixos.

# <<file-warning>>
{ ... }:

{
  imports = [
    ./configuration.nix
    ./hardware.nix
  ];
}

Configuration

This is a basic default configuration that specified the indended default configuration of the system. Because NixOS4 has a declarative configuration model, you can create or edit a description of the desired configuration, and update it from one file.

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, inputs, ... }:

{
  time.timeZone = "America/Toronto";

  networking.hostName = "nixos";
  networking.useDHCP = false;
  networking.firewall.enable = false;
  networking.interfaces.ens3.useDHCP = true;

  <<host-config-home>>
  <<host-config-ssh>>

  programs.mtr.enable = true;
  programs.fish.enable = true;
  programs.gnupg.agent.enable = true;

  users.users.chris = {
    shell = pkgs.fish;
    isNormalUser = true;
    extraGroups = [ "wheel" ];
  };
}

Hardware

The file system for this host is a single 24GB QCOW file, a format for disk images used by QEMU20. The file can be recreated easily by following the steps listed in the NixOS4 installation manual, specifically the section on disk formatting.

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, lib, pkgs, modulesPath, ... }:

{
  imports =
    [ (modulesPath + "/profiles/qemu-guest.nix")
    ];

  boot.initrd.availableKernelModules = [ "ata_piix" "floppy" "sd_mod" "sr_mod" ];
  boot.initrd.kernelModules = [ ];
  boot.kernelModules = [ ];
  boot.extraModulePackages = [ ];

  boot.loader.grub.enable = true;
  boot.loader.grub.version = 2;
  boot.loader.grub.device = "/dev/sda";

  fileSystems."/" =
    { device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/fddc37ff-a442-41fa-afc4-abf878be7c5a";
      fsType = "ext4";
    };

  swapDevices =
    [ { device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/5fc0e3df-e796-4fe2-8482-c6acaed9d36f"; }
    ];
}

Acernitro

My gaming laptop, the model is an Acer Nitro AN-515-5322. The Nitro 5 has more in common with the mid-range notebooks rather than the gaming models due to its cooling design, chassis, and overall construction.

Here are the specs:

Slot Component
CPU Intel Core i5-8300H
GPU NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050Ti (4GB GDDR5)
RAM 16GB DDR4
Display 15.6" Full HD (1920 x 1080), IPS
Storage 1000GB HDD
Weight 2.48kg (5.5 lbs)
acernitro = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem {
  system = "x86_64-linux";
  specialArgs = { inherit inputs; };
  modules = [
    ./hosts/acernitro
    <<module-x11>>
    <<module-ssh>>
    <<module-hugo>>
    <<module-docker>>
    <<module-flakes>>
    <<module-cachix>>
    <<module-nvidia>>
    <<module-firefox>>
    <<module-moonlight>>
    <<module-teamviewer>>
    <<module-home-manager>>
  ];
};

Deploy this configuration with nixos-rebuild switch --flake /etc/dotfiles/#acernitro.

# <<file-warning>>
{ ... }:

{
  imports = [
    ./configuration.nix
    ./hardware.nix
  ];
}

Configuration

This configuration is nearly identical to the default, except for a few key differences:

  • Enables sound

  • Applies the desired hostname

  • Enables power management daemon

  • It adds support for UEFI systems

  • Enables support for wireless networking

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, inputs, ... }:

{
  time.timeZone = "America/Toronto";

  networking.hostName = "acernitro";
  networking.firewall.enable = false;
  networking.wireless.enable = true;
  networking.wireless.userControlled.enable = true;
  networking.useDHCP = false;
  networking.interfaces.enp6s0f1.useDHCP = true;
  networking.interfaces.wlp0s20f3.useDHCP = true;

  <<host-config-wifi>>
  <<host-config-home>>
  <<host-config-ssh>>

  services.tlp.enable = true;
  services.xserver.dpi = 96;
  services.xserver.libinput.touchpad.tapping = false;
  services.printing.enable = true;

  programs.mtr.enable = true;
  programs.fish.enable = true;
  programs.gnupg.agent.enable = true;

  users.users.chris = {
    shell = pkgs.fish;
    isNormalUser = true;
    extraGroups = [ "wheel" ];
  };
}

Hardware

  • Enables sound via PulseAudio

  • Enables powertop via power management

  • Adds support for the NVIDIA Hybrid GPU

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, lib, pkgs, modulesPath, ... }:

{
  imports =
    [ (modulesPath + "/installer/scan/not-detected.nix")
    ];

  boot.initrd.availableKernelModules = [ "xhci_pci" "ahci" "usb_storage" "sd_mod" "rtsx_pci_sdmmc" ];
  boot.initrd.kernelModules = [ ];
  boot.kernelModules = [ "kvm-intel" ];
  boot.extraModulePackages = [ ];

  boot.loader.systemd-boot.enable = true;
  boot.loader.efi.canTouchEfiVariables = true;

  sound.enable = true;
  hardware.pulseaudio.enable = true;
  hardware.pulseaudio.support32Bit = true;

  fileSystems."/" =
    { device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/2f548eb9-47ce-4280-950f-9c6d1d162852";
      fsType = "ext4"; 
    };

  fileSystems."/boot" =
    { device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/5BC3-73F3";
      fsType = "vfat";
    };

  swapDevices =
    [ { device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/bef7bf62-d26f-45b1-a1f8-1227c2f8b26a"; }
    ];

  powerManagement.powertop.enable = true;
  powerManagement.cpuFreqGovernor = lib.mkDefault "powersave";
}

Raspberry

The Raspberry Pi 40023 is your complete personal computer, built into a compact keyboard. It features a quad-core, 64-bit processor, 4GB of RAM, wireless networking, dual-display output, 4k video playback, as well as a 40-pin GPIO header. It's the most powerful Raspberry Pi computer yet.

raspberry = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem {
  system = "aarch64-linux";
  specialArgs = { inherit inputs; };
  modules = [
    ./hosts/raspberry
    <<module-x11>>
    <<module-ssh>>
    <<module-flakes>>
    <<module-cachix>>
    <<module-home-manager>>
  ];
};

Deploy this configuration with sudo nixos-rebuild switch --flake /etc/dotfiles/#raspberry.

# <<file-warning>>
{ ... }:

{
  imports = [
    ./configuration.nix
    ./hardware.nix
  ];
}

Configuration

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, ... }:

{
  time.timeZone = "America/Toronto";

  networking.hostName = "raspberry";
  networking.firewall.enable = false;
  networking.networkmanager.enable = true;
  networking.interfaces.eth0.useDHCP = true;
  networking.interfaces.wlan0.useDHCP = true;

  <<host-config-home>>
  <<host-config-ssh>>

  environment.systemPackages = [
    pkgs.libraspberrypi
    pkgs.raspberrypi-eeprom
  ];

  programs.fish.enable = true;
  programs.gnupg.agent.enable = true;

  users.users.chris = {
    shell = pkgs.fish;
    isNormalUser = true;
    extraGroups = [ "wheel" "networkmanager" ];
  };
}

Hardware

This section is very much a work in progress. I have struggled to get this device to boot according to the NixOS documentation / wiki on the subject. It seems that when running with the vendored kernel there's an issue booting from the SD card. Nevertheless, the issue is avoided by using the standard kernel.

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, lib, inputs, ... }:

{
  # imports = [
  #   inputs.nixos-hardware.nixosModules.raspberry-pi-4
  # ];

  # boot.kernelPackages = pkgs.linuxPackages_rpi4;
  boot.tmpOnTmpfs = true;
  boot.initrd.availableKernelModules = [ "usbhid" "usb_storage" ];
  boot.kernelParams = [
    "8250.nr_uarts=1"
    "console=ttyAMA0,115200"
    "console=tty1"
    "cma=128M"
  ];

  boot.loader.grub.enable = false;
  boot.loader.generic-extlinux-compatible.enable = true;
  boot.loader.raspberryPi = {
    enable = true;
    version = 4;
    firmwareConfig = ''
      hdmi_drive=2
      hdmi_force_hotplug=1
      dtparam=sd_poll_once=on
      dtparam=audio=on
    '';
  };

  # FIXME: Requires GPU support.
  services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "fbdev" ];

  sound.enable = true;
  hardware.pulseaudio.enable = true;
  hardware.enableRedistributableFirmware = true;
  # hardware.raspberry-pi."4".fkms-3d.enable = true;

  fileSystems = {
    "/" = {
      device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/44444444-4444-4444-8888-888888888888";
      fsType = "ext4";
      options = [ "noatime" ];
    };
  };

  powerManagement.cpuFreqGovernor = "ondemand";
}

Homecloud

The Raspberry Pi Model B-8GB24 is the latest product in the popular Raspberry Pi range of computers. It offers groundbreaking increases in processor speed, multimedia performance, memory, and connectivity compared to the prior generation. On NixOS4, the Raspberry Pi family is only supported on the AArch64 platform, although there is community support for armv6l and armv7l.

homecloud = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem {
  system = "aarch64-linux";
  specialArgs = { inherit inputs; };
  modules = [
    ./hosts/homecloud
    <<module-ssh>>
    <<module-flakes>>
    <<module-cachix>>
  ];
};

Deploy this configuration with sudo nixos-rebuild switch --flake /etc/dotfiles/#homecloud.

# <<file-warning>
{ ... }:

{
  imports = [
    ./configuration.nix
    ./hardware.nix
  ];
}

Configuration

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, ... }:

{
  time.timeZone = "America/Toronto";

  networking.hostName = "homecloud";
  networking.firewall.enable = false;
  networking.networkmanager.enable = true;
  networking.interfaces.eth0.useDHCP = true;
  networking.interfaces.wlan0.useDHCP = true;

  <<host-config-wifi>>
  <<host-config-home>>
  <<host-config-ssh>>

  environment.systemPackages = [
    pkgs.libraspberrypi
    pkgs.raspberrypi-eeprom
  ];

  programs.fish.enable = true;
  programs.mtr.enable = true;

  users.users.chris = {
    shell = pkgs.fish;
    isNormalUser = true;
    extraGroups = [ "wheel" "networkmanager" ];
  };
}

Hardware

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, lib, inputs, ... }:

{
  # imports = [
  #   inputs.nixos-hardware.nixosModules.raspberry-pi-4
  # ];

  # boot.kernelPackages = pkgs.linuxPackages_rpi4;
  boot.tmpOnTmpfs = true;
  boot.initrd.availableKernelModules = [ "usbhid" "usb_storage" ];
  boot.kernelParams = [
    "8250.nr_uarts=1"
    "console=ttyAMA0,115200"
    "console=tty1"
    "cma=128M"
  ];

  boot.loader.grub.enable = false;
  boot.loader.generic-extlinux-compatible.enable = true;
  boot.loader.raspberryPi = {
    enable = true;
    version = 4;
    firmwareConfig = ''
      hdmi_drive=2
      hdmi_force_hotplug=1
      dtparam=sd_poll_once=on
      dtparam=audio=on
    '';
  };

  # hardware.raspberry-pi."4".fkms-3d.enable = true;

  fileSystems = {
    "/" = {
      device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/44444444-4444-4444-8888-888888888888";
      fsType = "ext4";
      options = [ "noatime" ];
    };
  };

  powerManagement.cpuFreqGovernor = "ondemand";
}

Android

This is my Samsung Galaxy S10+25 running Nix On Droid5 with the experimental support for Flakes being used to manage the configuration.

android = (inputs.nix-on-droid.lib.aarch64-linux.nix-on-droid {
  config = ./hosts/android/nix-on-droid.nix;
}).activationPackage;

Build the activation package with nix build .#android --impure, and activate it with result/activate.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs, ... }:

{
  environment.packages = [
    pkgs.git
    pkgs.vim
    pkgs.pass
    pkgs.gnupg
    pkgs.openssh
  ];
}

Module Definitions

Modules are files combined by NixOS4 to produce the full system configuration. Modules wre introduced to allow extending NixOS4 without modifying its source code. They also allow splitting up configuration.nix, making the system configuration easier to maintain and use.

X11

./modules/x11.nix

X11, or X26 is the generic name for the X Window System Display Server. All graphical GNU/Linux27 applications connect to an X-Window26 (or Wayland28) to display graphical data on the monitor of a computer. Its a program that acts as the interface between graphical applications and the graphics subsystem of the computer.

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, ... }:

{
  services.xserver.enable = true;
  services.xserver.layout = "us";
  services.xserver.libinput.enable = true;
  services.xserver.displayManager.startx.enable = true;

  environment = {
    variables = {
      XDG_DESKTOP_DIR = "$HOME/";
      XDG_CACHE_HOME = "$HOME/.cache";
      XDG_CONFIG_HOME = "$HOME/.config";
      XDG_DATA_HOME = "$HOME/.local/share";
      XDG_BIN_HOME = "$HOME/.local/bin";
    };
    systemPackages = with pkgs; [
      pkgs.sqlite
      pkgs.pfetch
      pkgs.cmatrix
      pkgs.asciiquarium
    ];
    extraInit = ''
      export XAUTHORITY=/tmp/Xauthority
      export xserverauthfile=/tmp/xserverauth
      [ -e ~/.Xauthority ] && mv -f ~/.Xauthority "$XAUTHORITY"
      [ -e ~/.serverauth.* ] && mv -f ~/.serverauth.* "$xserverauthfile"
    '';
  };

  services.picom.enable = true;
  services.printing.enable = true;

  fonts.fonts = with pkgs; [
    iosevka-bin
    emacs-all-the-icons-fonts
  ];
}

SSH

./modules/ssh.nix

OpenSSH29 is a suite of secure networking utilities based on the Secure Shell Protocol, which provides a secure channel over an unsecured network in a client-server architecture. OpenSSH29 started as a fork of the free SSH program; later versions were proprietary software.

Apply some configuration to the default settings:

  • Disable logging in as root

  • Disable password authentication

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, ... }:

{
  services.openssh = {
    enable = true;
    permitRootLogin = "no";
    passwordAuthentication = false;
  };
}

Hugo

./modules/hugo.nix

Hugo30 is one of the most popular open-source static site generators.

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, ... }:

let
  myUpdateSite = pkgs.writeShellScriptBin "update-site" ''
    rsync -aP /etc/dotfiles/docs/public/ ubuntu@chrishayward.xyz:/var/www/chrishayward
  '';

in {
  environment.systemPackages = [
    pkgs.hugo
    myUpdateSite
  ];
}

Flakes

./modules/flakes.nix

Nix Flakes31 are an upcoming feature of the Nix package manager6. They allow you to specify your codes dependencies in a declarative way, simply by listing them inside of a flake.nix file. Each dependency is then pinned to a specific git-hash. Flakes31 replace the nix-channels command and things like builtins.fetchGit, keeping dependencies at the top of the tree, and channels always in sync. Currently, Flakes31 are not available unless explicitly enabled.

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, inputs, ... }:

{
  nix = {
    package = pkgs.nixUnstable;
    extraOptions = ''
      experimental-features = nix-command flakes
    '';
  };

  nixpkgs = {
    config = { allowUnfree = true; };
    overlays = [ inputs.emacs-overlay.overlay ];
  };
}

Cachix

./modules/cachix.nix

Cachix32 is a Command line client for Nix6 binary cache hosting. This allows downloading and usage of pre-compiled binaries for applications on nearly every available system architecture. This speeds up the time it takes to rebuild configurations.

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, ... }:

{
  nix = {
    binaryCaches = [
      "https://nix-community.cachix.org"
    ];
    binaryCachePublicKeys = [
      "nix-community.cachix.org-1:mB9FSh9qf2dCimDSUo8Zy7bkq5CX+/rkCWyvRCYg3Fs="
    ];
  };
}

Docker

./modules/docker.nix

Docker is a set of platform as a service tools that use OS level virtualization to deliver software in packages called containers. Containers are isolated from one another and bundle their own software, libraries, and configuration files; they can communicate with each other through well-defined channels.

{ config, pkgs, ... }:

{
  # Enable the docker virutalization platform.
  virtualisation.docker = {
    enable = true;
    enableOnBoot = true;
    autoPrune.enable = true;
  };

  # Required for the `docker' command.
  users.users.chris.extraGroups = [ "docker" ];
}

NVIDIA

./modules/nvidia.nix

Use the lspci command to determine the type of graphics card you have, following the guide on NVIDIA at the NixOS Wiki33.

  • MXM / output-providing card (shows as VGA Controller in lspci), i.e. graphics card in desktop computer or in some laptops

  • muxless/non-MXM Optimus cards have no display outputs and show as 3D Controller in lspci output, seen in most modern consumer laptops

MXM cards allow you to use the Nvidia card standalone, in Non-Optimus mode. Non-MXM cards require Optimus, Nvidia's integrated-vs-discrete GPU switching technology.

Your output should look something like this:

...

00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation UHD Graphics 630 (Mobile)
        Subsystem: Acer Incorporated [ALI] Device 1264
        Kernel driver in use: i915
        Kernel modules: i915
...
        
01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: NVIDIA Corporation GP107M [GeForce GTX 1050 Mobile] (rev a1)
        Subsystem: Acer Incorporated [ALI] Device 1265
        Kernel driver in use: nouveau
        Kernel modules: nvidiafb, nouveau
01:00.1 Audio device: NVIDIA Corporation GP107GL High Definition Audio Controller (rev a1)
        Kernel driver in use: snd_hda_intel
        Kernel modules: snd_hda_intel
...

This reveals the information needed, which is the information about the two display cards in the laptop:

Intel UHD

This is the dedicated graphics on the CPU

NVIDIA GP107M

This is the mobile version of the GTX 1050ti

{ config, pkgs, ... }:

let
  myIntelBusId = "PCI:0:2:0";
  myNvidiaBusId = "PCI:1:0:0";
  myNvidiaOffload = pkgs.writeShellScriptBin "nvidia-offload" ''
    export __NV_PRIME_RENDER_OFFLOAD=1
    export __NV_PRIME_RENDER_OFFLOAD_PROVIDER=NVIDIA-G0
    export __GLX_VENDOR_LIBRARY_NAME=nvidia
    export __VK_LAYER_NV_optimus=NVIDIA_only
    exec -a "$0" "$@"
  '';

in {
  # Add the offload script to the $PATH.
  environment.systemPackages = [ myNvidiaOffload ];

  # Configure XDG compliance.
  environment.variables = {
    __GL_SHADER_DISK_CACHE_PATH = "$XDG_CACHE_HOME/nv";
    CUDA_CACHE_PATH = "$XDG_CACHE_HOME/nv";
  };

  # Enable the NVIDIA drivers.
  services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ];

  # Fix screen tearing.
  services.xserver.screenSection = ''
    Option "metamodes" "nvidia-auto-select +0+0 {ForceFullCompositionPipeline=On}"
    Option "AllowIndirectGLXProtocol" "off"
    Option "TripleBuffer" "on"
  '';

  # Configure `offload-mode'.
  hardware.nvidia.prime = {
    offload.enable = true;
    intelBusId = myIntelBusId;
    nvidiaBusId = myNvidiaBusId;
  };

  # Add OpenGL support.
  hardware.opengl = {
    enable = true;
    driSupport32Bit = true;
    extraPackages32 = with pkgs; [
      pkgsi686Linux.libva
    ];
  };

  # Add user to video group.
  users.users.chris = {
    extraGroups = [ "video" ];
  };
}

Firefox

./modules/firefox.nix

Firefox Browser34, also known as Mozilla Firefox or simply Firefox, is a free and open-source web browser developed by the Mozilla Foundation and its subsidiary, the Mozilla Corporation. Firefox uses the Gecko layout engine to render web pages, which implements current and anticipated web standards. In 2017, Firefox began incorporating new technology under the code name Quantum to promote parallelism and a more intuitive user interface.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs, ... }:

{
  # NOTE: Use the binary until module is developed.
  environment.systemPackages = [
    pkgs.firefox-bin 
  ];
}

Jellyfin

./modules/jellyfin.nix

Jellyfin35 is a suite of multimedia applications designed to organize, manage, and share digital media files to networked devices. It consists of a server application installed on a machine, and another application running as a client on devices such as Smartphones, Tablets, SmartTVs, Streaming Media Players, Game Consoles, or in a Web Browser. It can also serve media to DLNA and Chromecast enabled devices. It's free and open-source software fork of Emby.

# <<file-warning>>
{ config, pkgs, ... }:

{
  services.jellyfin = {
    enable = true;
  };
}

Moonlight

./modules/moonlight.nix

Moonlight36 is an open-source implementation of NVIDIA's GameStream Protocol. You can stream your collection of PC games from your GameStream-compatible PC to any supported device and play them remotely. Moonlight36 is perfect for gaming on the go (or on GNU/Linux27) without sacrificing the graphics and game selection available for the PC.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs, ... }:

{
  environment.systemPackages = [
    pkgs.moonlight-qt
  ];
}

Teamviewer

./modules/teamviewer.nix

The Teamviewer37 remote connectivity cloud platform enables secure remote access to any device, across platforms, from anywhere, anytime. Teamviewer37 connects computers, smartphones, servers, IoT devices, robots – anything – with fast, high performance connections through their global access network. It has been used in outer-space low-bandwidth environments.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs, ... }:

{
  # NOTE: Neither of these are working!
  # services.teamviewer.enable = true;

  # environment.systemPackages = [
  #   pkgs.teamviewer
  # ];
}

Home Manager

Home Manager38 includes a flake.nix file for compatibility with Nix Flakes, a feature utilized heavily in this project. When using flakes, switching to a new configuration is done only for the entire system, using the command nixos-rebuild switch --flake <path>, instead of nixos-rebuild, and home-manager seperately.

inputs.home-manager.nixosModules.home-manager {
  home-manager.useGlobalPkgs = true;
  home-manager.useUserPackages = true;
  home-manager.users.chris = {
    imports = [
      <<module-git>>
      <<module-gpg>>
      <<module-vim>>
      <<module-gtk>>
      <<module-emacs>>
    ];
  };
}

Git

./modules/git.nix

Git39 is a free and open source distributed version control system designed to handle everything from small to very large projects with speed and efficiency. Git is easy to learn, has a tiny footprint, and lighting fast performance. It outclasses every other version control tool such as: SCM, Subversion, CVS, ClearCase, with features like cheap local branching, convinient staging areas, and multiple workflows.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs, ... }:

let
  # Fix any corruptions in the local copy.
  myGitFix = pkgs.writeShellScriptBin "git-fix" ''
    if [ -d .git/objects/ ]; then
      find .git/objects/ -type f -empty | xargs rm -f
      git fetch -p
      git fsck --full
    fi
    exit 1
  '';

in {
  home.packages = [ myGitFix ];

  programs.git = {
    enable = true;
    userName = "Christopher James Hayward";
    userEmail = "chris@chrishayward.xyz";

    signing = {
      key = "37AB1CB72B741E478CA026D43025DCBD46F81C0F";
      signByDefault = true;
    };
  };
}

Gpg

./modules/gpg.nix

GNU Privacy Guard40 is a free-software replacement for Symantec's PGP cryptographic software suite. It is compliant with RFC 4880, the IETF standards-track specification of OpenPGP. Modern versions of PGP are interoperable with GnuPG and other OpenPGP-compliant systems.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs, ... }:

{
  services.gpg-agent = {
    enable = true;
    defaultCacheTtl = 1800;
    enableSshSupport = true;
    pinentryFlavor = "gtk2";
  };
}

Vim

./modules/vim.nix

Neovim41 is a project that seeks to aggressively refactor Vim in order to:

  • Simplify maintenance and encourage contributions

  • Split the work between multiple developers

  • Enable advanced UIs without core modification

  • Maximize extensibility

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs, ... }:

{
  programs.neovim = {
    enable = true;
    viAlias = true;
    vimAlias = true;
    vimdiffAlias = true;
    extraConfig = ''
      set number relativenumber
      set nobackup
    '';
    extraPackages = [
      pkgs.nixfmt
    ];
    plugins = with pkgs.vimPlugins; [
      vim-nix
      vim-airline
      vim-polyglot
    ];
  };
}

GTK

./modules/gtk.nix

GTK42 is a free and open-source, cross-platform widget toolkit for graphical user interfaces. It's one of the most popular toolkits for the Wayland28 and X1126 windowing systems.

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs, ... }:

{
  home.packages = [
    pkgs.nordic
    pkgs.arc-icon-theme
    pkgs.lxappearance
  ];

  home.file.".gtkrc-2.0" = {
    text = ''
      # gtk-theme-name="Nordic-Polar"
      gtk-theme-name="Nordic-darker"
      gtk-icon-theme-name="Arc"
      gtk-font-name="Sans 10"
      gtk-cursor-theme-size=0
      gtk-toolbar-style=GTK_TOOLBAR_BOTH_HORIZ
      gtk-toolbar-icon-size=GTK_ICON_SIZE_LARGE_TOOLBAR
      gtk-button-images=0
      gtk-menu-images=0
      gtk-enable-event-sounds=1
      gtk-enable-input-feedback-sounds=1
      gtk-xft-antialias=1
      gtk-xft-hinting=1
      gtk-xft-hintstyle="hintmedium"
    '';
  };
}

Emacs Configuration

./modules/emacs.nix

GNU/Emacs2 is an extensible, customizable, free/libre text editor – and more. At its core is an interpreter for Emacs Lisp40, a dialect of the Lisp programming language with extensions to support text editing. Other features include:

  • Highly customizable

  • Full Unicopde support

  • Content-aware editing modes

  • Complete built-in documentation

  • Wide range of functionality beyond text editing

# <<file-warning>>
{ pkgs, ... }:

let
  myEmacs = pkgs.emacsWithPackagesFromUsePackage {
    config = ../README.org;
    package = <<emacs-native-comp-package>>
    alwaysEnsure = true;
    alwaysTangle = true;
    extraEmacsPackages = epkgs: [
      # Required packages...
      <<emacs-exwm-package>>
      <<emacs-evil-package>>
      <<emacs-general-package>>
      <<emacs-which-key-package>>

      # Optional packages.
      <<emacs-org-package>>
      <<emacs-org-roam-package>>
      <<emacs-org-drill-package>>
      <<emacs-pomodoro-package>>
      <<emacs-writegood-package>>
      <<emacs-http-package>>
      <<emacs-hugo-package>>
      <<emacs-reveal-package>>
      <<emacs-pass-package>>
      <<emacs-docker-package>>
      <<emacs-mu4e-package>>
      <<emacs-dired-package>>
      <<emacs-icons-package>>
      <<emacs-emoji-package>>
      <<emacs-eshell-package>>
      <<emacs-vterm-package>>
      <<emacs-magit-package>>
      <<emacs-fonts-package>>
      <<emacs-elfeed-package>>
      <<emacs-nix-mode-package>>
      <<emacs-projectile-package>>
      <<emacs-lsp-package>>
      <<emacs-company-package>>
      <<emacs-ccls-package>>
      <<emacs-golang-package>>
      <<emacs-python-package>>
      <<emacs-rustic-package>>
      <<emacs-plantuml-package>>
      <<emacs-protobuf-package>>
      <<emacs-swiper-package>>
      <<emacs-desktop-package>>
      <<emacs-doom-themes-package>>
      <<emacs-doom-modeline-package>>
    ];
  };

in {
  home.packages = [
    <<emacs-exwm-extras>>
    <<emacs-pass-extras>>
    <<emacs-mu4e-extras>>
    <<emacs-aspell-extras>>
    <<emacs-texlive-extras>>
    <<emacs-desktop-extras>>
    <<emacs-plantuml-extras>>
    <<emacs-nix-mode-extras>>
  ];

  programs.emacs = {
    enable = true;
    package = myEmacs;
  };

  <<emacs-exwm-config>>
  <<emacs-exwm-xinitrc>>
  <<emacs-mu4e-config>>
}

When Emacs is started, it normally tries to load a Lisp program from an ititialization file, or init file. This file, if it exists, specifies how to initialize and configure Emacs.

;; <<file-warning>>

;; Required inputs.
<<emacs-exwm-elisp>>
<<emacs-evil-elisp>>
<<emacs-general-elisp>>
<<emacs-which-key-elisp>>

;; Optional inputs.
<<emacs-org-elisp>>
<<emacs-org-roam-elisp>>
<<emacs-org-drill-elisp>>
<<emacs-org-agenda-elisp>>
<<emacs-pomodoro-elisp>>
<<emacs-writegood-elisp>>
<<emacs-aspell-elisp>>
<<emacs-eww-elisp>>
<<emacs-http-elisp>>
<<emacs-hugo-elisp>>
<<emacs-reveal-elisp>>
<<emacs-pass-elisp>>
<<emacs-docker-elisp>>
<<emacs-erc-elisp>>
<<emacs-mu4e-elisp>>
<<emacs-dired-elisp>>
<<emacs-icons-elisp>>
<<emacs-emoji-elisp>>
<<emacs-eshell-elisp>>
<<emacs-vterm-elisp>>
<<emacs-magit-elisp>>
<<emacs-fonts-elisp>>
<<emacs-elfeed-elisp>>
<<emacs-projectile-elisp>>
<<emacs-lsp-elisp>>
<<emacs-company-elisp>>
<<emacs-golang-elisp>>
<<emacs-python-elisp>>
<<emacs-rustic-elisp>>
<<emacs-plantuml-elisp>>
<<emacs-desktop-elisp>>

;; User interface.
<<emacs-swiper-elisp>>
<<emacs-transparency-elisp>>
<<emacs-doom-themes-elisp>>
<<emacs-doom-modeline-elisp>>

It's somtimes desirable to have customization that takes effect during Emacs startup earlier than the normal init file. Place these configurations in ~/.emacs.d/early-init.el. Most customizations should be put in the normal init file ~/.emacs.d/init.el.

;; <<file-warning>>
<<emacs-disable-ui-elisp>>
<<emacs-native-comp-elisp>>
<<emacs-backup-files-elisp>>
<<emacs-shell-commands-elisp>>

Native Comp

pkgs.emacsGcc;

Native Comp, also known as GccEmacs, refers to the --with-native-compilation configuration option when building GNU/Emacs2. It adds support for compiling Emacs Lisp to native code using libgccjit. All of the Emacs Lisp packages shipped with Emacs are native-compiled, providing a noticable performance iomprovement out-of-the-box.

;; Silence warnings from packages that don't support `native-comp'.
(setq comp-async-report-warnings-errors nil         ;; Emacs 27.2 ...
      native-comp-async-report-warnings-errors nil) ;; Emacs 28+  ...

Disable UI

Emacs2 has been around since the 1980s, and it's painfully obvious when you're greeted with the default user interface. Disable some unwanted features to clean it up, and bring the appearance to something closer to a modern editor.

;; Disable unwanted UI elements.
(tooltip-mode -1)
(menu-bar-mode -1)
(tool-bar-mode -1)
(scroll-bar-mode -1)

;; Fix the scrolling behaviour.
(setq scroll-conservatively 101)

;; Fix mouse-wheel scrolling behaviour.
(setq mouse-wheel-follow-mouse t
      mouse-wheel-progressive-speed t
      mouse-wheel-scroll-amount '(3 ((shift) . 3)))

;; Start in fullscreen/maximized.
(add-to-list 'default-frame-alist '(fullscreen . maximized))

Backup Files

Emacs2 makes a backup for a file only the first time the file is saved from a buffer. No matter how many times the file is subsequently written to, the backup remains unchanged. For files managed by a version control system, backup files are redundant since the previous versions are already stored.

;; Disable unwanted features.
(setq make-backup-files nil
      create-lockfiles nil)

Shell Commands

Define some methods for interaction between GNU/Emacs2, and the systems underyling shell:

  1. Method to run an external process, launching any application on a new process without interferring with Emacs2

  2. Method to apply commands to the curren call process, effecting the running instance of Emacs2

;; Define a method to run an external process.
(defun dotfiles/run (cmd)
  "Run an external process."
  (interactive (list (read-shell-command "λ ")))
  (start-process-shell-command cmd nil cmd))

;; Define a method to run a background process.
(defun dotfiles/run-in-background (cmd)
  (let ((command-parts (split-string cmd "[ ]+")))
    (apply #'call-process `(,(car command-parts) nil 0 nil ,@(cdr command-parts)))))

Nix Mode

pkgs.nixfmt

Nix-mode43 is an Emacs2 major mode for editing Nix6 expressions. This provides basic handling of .nix files. Syntax highlighting and indentation support using SMIE are provided.

epkgs.nix-mode

Evil Mode

Evil44 is an extensible VI layer for GNU/Emacs2. It emulates the main features of Vim41, turning GNU/Emacs2 into a modal editor.

epkgs.evil
epkgs.evil-collection
epkgs.evil-surround
epkgs.evil-nerd-commenter

The next time Emacs2 is started, it will come up in normal state, denoted by <N> in the modeline. This is where the main vi bindings are defined. Like Emacs2 in general, Evil44 is extensible in Emacs Lisp40.

;; Enable the Extensible VI Layer for Emacs.
(setq evil-want-integration t   ;; Required for `evil-collection.'
      evil-want-keybinding nil  ;; Same as above.
      evil-want-C-i-jump nil)   ;; Disable jumping in terminal.
(evil-mode +1)

;; Configure `evil-collection'.
(evil-collection-init)

;; Configure `evil-surround'.
(global-evil-surround-mode +1)

;; Configure `evil-nerd-commenter'.
(global-set-key (kbd "M-;") 'evilnc-comment-or-uncomment-lines)

;; Invoke `org-cycle' in normal mode inside of `org-mode' buffers.
(evil-define-key 'normal 'org-mode-map (kbd "<tab>") #'org-cycle)

EXWM

epkgs.exwm

EXWM (Emacs X Window Manager)21 is a full-featured tiling X window manager for GNU/Emacs2 built on-top of XELB. It features:

  • Fully keyboard-driven operations

  • Hybrid layout modes (tiling & stacking)

  • Dynamic workspace support

  • ICCM/EWMH compliance

pkgs.nitrogen
pkgs.autorandr

I wanted to leave (exwm-enable) out of my Emacs configuration (which does no harm anyways). This can be called when using the daemon to start EXWM21.

xsession = {
  enable = true;
  windowManager.command = ''
    ${pkgs.nitrogen}/bin/nitrogen --restore
    ${myEmacs}/bin/emacs --daemon -f exwm-enable
    ${myEmacs}/bin/emacsclient -c
  '';
};

EXWM21 cannot make an X window manager by itself, this is by design; You must tell X to do it. Override the ~/.xinitrc file to start the xsession.

home.file.".xinitrc" = {
  text = ''
    exec ./.xsession
  '';
};
;; Configure `exwm'.
(setq exwm-layout-show-all-buffers t
      exwm-worspace-show-all-buffers t)

;; Configure input keys.
(setq exwm-input-prefix-keys
  '(?\M-x
  ?\C-g
  ?\C-\ ))
(setq exwm-input-global-keys
  `(([?\s-r] . exwm-reset)
    ,@(mapcar (lambda (i)
                `(,(kbd (format "s-%d" i)) .
                (lambda ()
                (interactive)
                (exwm-workspace-switch-create ,i))))
                (number-sequence 0 9))))

;; Configure `exwm-randr'.
(require 'exwm-randr)
(exwm-randr-enable)

;; Configure custom hooks.
(setq display-time-day-and-date t)
(add-hook 'exwm-init-hook
  (lambda ()
    (display-battery-mode +1) ;; Display battery info (if available).
    (display-time-mode +1)))  ;; Display the time in the modeline.

;; Setup buffer display names.
(add-hook 'exwm-update-class-hook
  (lambda ()
    (exwm-workspace-rename-buffer exwm-class-name))) ;; Use the system class name.

;; Configure monitor hot-swapping.
(add-hook 'exwm-randr-screen-change-hook
  (lambda ()
    (dotfiles/run-in-background "autorandr --change --force"))) ;; Swap to the next screen config.

General

epkgs.general

General45 provides a more convenient method for binding keys in Emacs2, providing a unified interface for key definitions. Its primary purpose is to build on existing functionality to make key definitions more clear and concise.

;; Use <SPC> as a leader key via `general.el'.
(general-create-definer dotfiles/leader
  :keymaps '(normal insert visual emacs)
  :prefix "SPC"
  :global-prefix "C-SPC")

;; Setup general to work with `evil-mode'.
(setq general-evil-setup t)

;; Find files with <SPC> <period> ...
;; Switch buffers with <SPC> <comma> ...
(dotfiles/leader
  "." '(find-file :which-key "File")
  "," '(switch-to-buffer :which-key "Buffer")
  "k" '(kill-buffer :which-key "Kill")
  "c" '(kill-buffer-and-window :which-key "Close"))

;; Add keybindings for executing shell commands.
(dotfiles/leader
  "r" '(:ignore t :which-key "Run")
  "rr" '(dotfiles/run :which-key "Run")
  "ra" '(async-shell-command :which-key "Async"))

;; Add keybindings for quitting Emacs.
(dotfiles/leader
  "q" '(:ignore t :which-key "Quit")
  "qq" '(save-buffers-kill-emacs :which-key "Save")
  "qw" '(kill-emacs :which-key "Now")
  "qf" '(delete-frame :which-key "Frame"))

;; Add keybindings for toggles / tweaks.
(dotfiles/leader
  "t" '(:ignore t :which-key "Toggle / Tweak"))

;; Add keybindings for working with frames to replace
;; the C-x <num> <num> method of bindings, which is awful.
(dotfiles/leader
  "w" '(:ignore t :which-key "Windows")
  "ww" '(window-swap-states :which-key "Swap")
  "wc" '(delete-window :which-key "Close")
  "wh" '(windmove-left :which-key "Left")
  "wj" '(windmove-down :which-key "Down")
  "wk" '(windmove-up :which-key "Up")
  "wl" '(windmove-right :which-key "Right")
  "ws" '(:ignore t :which-key "Split")
  "wsj" '(split-window-below :which-key "Below")
  "wsl" '(split-window-right :which-key "Right"))

Which Key

Which-key46 is a minor mode for Emacs2 that displays the key bindings following your currently entered incomplete command (prefix) in a popup or mini-buffer.

epkgs.which-key
;; Configure `which-key' to see keyboard bindings in the
;; mini-buffer and when using M-x.
(setq which-key-idle-delay 0.0)
(which-key-mode +1)

EWW

The Emacs Web Wowser47 is a Web browser written in Emacs Lisp40 based on the shr.el library. It's my primary browser when it comes to text-based browsing.

  • Use eww as the default browser

  • Don't use any special fonts or colours

;; Set `eww' as the default browser.
(setq browse-url-browser-function 'eww-browse-url)

;; Configure the `shr' rendering engine.
(setq shr-use-fonts nil
      shr-use-colors nil)

ERC

ERC48 is a powerful, modular, and extensible IRC client for GNU/Emacs2. It's part of the GNU project, and included in Emacs.

;; Configure `erc'.
(setq erc-autojoin-channels-alist '(("irc.libera.chat" "#emacs" "#nixos" "#org-mode" "#systemcrafters"))
      erc-track-exclude-types '("JOIN" "NICK" "QUIT" "MODE")
      erc-lurker-hide-list '("JOIN" "PART" "QUIT"))

;; Configure `erc-fill-column'.
(add-hook 'window-configuration-change-hook
  '(lambda ()
     (setq erc-fill-column (- (window-width) 12))))

;; Connect to IRC via `erc'.
(defun dotfiles/erc-connect ()
  "Connected to IRC via `erc'."
  (interactive)
  (erc-tls :server "irc.libera.chat"
           :port 6697
           :nick "megaphone"
           :password (password-store-get "megaphone@libera.chat")
           :full-name "Chris Hayward"))

;; Configure keybindings.
(dotfiles/leader
  "i" '(dotfiles/erc-connect :which-key "Chat"))

Dired

epkgs.dired-single

Dired49 shows a directory listing inside of an Emacs2 buffer that can be used to perform various file operations on files and subdirectories. THe operations you can perform are numerous, from creating subdirectories, byte-compiling files, searching, and editing files. Dired-Extra50 provides extra functionality for Dired49.

;; Include `dired-x' for the `jump' method.
(require 'dired-x)

;; Configure `dired-single' to support `evil' keys.
(evil-collection-define-key 'normal 'dired-mode-map
  "h" 'dired-single-up-directory
  "l" 'dired-single-buffer)

;; Setup `all-the-icons' and the `dired' extension.

;; Configure keybindings for `dired'.
(dotfiles/leader
  "d" '(dired-jump :which-key "Dired"))

Icons

epkgs.all-the-icons
epkgs.all-the-icons-dired

All The Icons51 is a utility package to collect various Icon Fonts and prioritize them within GNU/Emacs2.

;; Setup `all-the-icons-dired'.
(add-hook 'dired-mode-hook 'all-the-icons-dired-mode)

;; Disable monochrome icons.
(setq all-the-icons-dired-monochrome nil)

;; Display default font ligatures.
(global-prettify-symbols-mode +1)

Emojis

epkgs.emojify

Emojify52 is an Emacs2 extension to display Emojis. It can display GitHub style Emojis like 😄 or plain ascii ones such as :). It tries to be as efficient as possible, while also providing flexibility.

;; Setup `emojify'.
(add-hook 'after-init-hook 'global-emojify-mode)

EShell

epkgs.eshell-prompt-extras

EShell 53 is a shell-like command interpreter for GNU/Emacs2 implemented in Emacs Lisp40. It invokes no external processes except for those requested by the user. It's intended to be an alternative for IELM, and a full REPL envionment for Emacs2.

;; Configure `eshell'.
(setq eshell-highlight-prompt nil
      eshell-prefer-lisp-functions nil)

;; Configure the lambda prompt.
(autoload 'epe-theme-lambda "eshell-prompt-extras")
(setq eshell-prompt-function 'epe-theme-lambda)

;; Configure keybindings for `eshell'.
(dotfiles/leader
  "e" '(eshell :which-key "EShell"))

VTerm

Emacs Libvterm (VTerm)54 is a fully-fledged terminal emulator inside GNU/Emacs2 based on Libvterm55, a blazing fast C library used in Neovim41. As a result of using compiled code (instead of Emacs Lisp40), VTerm54 is capable, fast, and it can seamlessly handle large outputs.

epkgs.vterm
;; Add keybindings for interacting with the shell(s).
(dotfiles/leader
  "v" '(vterm :which-key "VTerm"))

Magit

Magit56 is an interface to the Git39 version control system, implemented as a GNU/Emacs2 package written in Elisp40. It fills the glaring gap between the Git39 command line interface and various GUIs, letting you perform trivial as well as elaborate version control tasks within a few mnemonic key presses.

epkgs.magit
;; Add keybindings for working with `magit'.
(dotfiles/leader
  "g" '(:ignore t :which-key "Git")
  "gg" '(magit-status :which-key "Status")
  "gc" '(magit-clone :which-key "Clone")
  "gf" '(magit-fetch :which-key "Fetch")
  "gp" '(magit-pull :which-key "Pull"))

Fonts

epkgs.hydra
;; Configure the font when running as `emacs-server'.
(custom-set-faces
  '(default ((t (:inherit nil :height 120 :family "Iosevka")))))

;; Set all three of Emacs' font faces.
;; NOTE: This only works without `emacs-server'.
;; (set-face-attribute 'default nil :font "Iosevka" :height 96)
;; (set-face-attribute 'fixed-pitch nil :font "Iosevka" :height 96)
;; (set-face-attribute 'variable-pitch nil :font "Iosevka" :height 96)

;; Define a `hydra' function for scaling the text interactively.
(defhydra hydra-text-scale (:timeout 4)
  "Scale text"
  ("j" text-scale-decrease "Decrease")
  ("k" text-scale-increase "Increase")
  ("f" nil "Finished" :exit t))

;; Create keybinding for calling the function.
(dotfiles/leader
  "tf" '(hydra-text-scale/body :which-key "Font"))

Elfeed

epkgs.elfeed

Elfeed57 is an extensible web feed reader for GNU/Emacs2, support both Atom and RSS. It requires Emacs 24.3+ and is available for download from the standard repositories.

;; Configure `elfeed'.
(setq elfeed-db-directory (expand-file-name "~/.cache/elfeed"))

;; Add custom feeds for `elfeed' to fetch.
(setq elfeed-feeds (quote
                     (("https://hexdsl.co.uk/rss.xml")
                      ("https://lukesmith.xyz/rss.xml")
                      ("https://friendo.monster/rss.xml")
                      ("https://chrishayward.xyz/index.xml")
                      ("https://protesilaos.com/master.xml"))))

;; Add custom keybindings for `elfeed'.
(dotfiles/leader
  "l" '(:ignore t :which-key "Elfeed")
  "ll" '(elfeed :which-key "Open")
  "lu" '(elfeed-update :which-key "Update"))

Org Mode

epkgs.org

Org-mode58 is a document editing and organizing mode, designed for notes, planning, and authoring within the free software text editor GNU/Emacs2. The name is used to encompass plain text files (such as this one) that include simple marks to indicate levels of a hierarchy, and an editor with functions that can read the markup and manipulate the hierarchy elements.

;; Configure `org-mode' source blocks.
(setq org-src-fontify-natively t      ;; Make source blocks prettier.
      org-src-tab-acts-natively t     ;; Use TAB indents within source blocks.
      org-src-preserve-indentation t  ;; Stop `org-mode' from formatting blocks.
      org-confirm-babel-evaluate nil) ;; Don't ask for confirmation to evaluate blocks.

;; Add an `org-mode-hook'.
(add-hook 'org-mode-hook
  (lambda ()
    (org-indent-mode)
    (visual-line-mode)))

;; Remove the `Validate XHTML 1.0' message from HTML export.
(setq org-export-html-validation-link nil
      org-html-validation-link nil)

;; Configure the keywords in the TODO -> DONE sequence.
(setq org-todo-keywords '((sequence "TODO" "START" "WAIT" "DONE")))

;; Track ids globally.
(setq org-id-track-globally t)

;; Configure `org-babel' languages.
(org-babel-do-load-languages
  'org-babel-load-languages
  '((C . t)))

;; Log / Clock into property drawers.
(setq org-log-into-drawer t
      org-clock-into-drawer t)

;; Encrypt files with the public key.
(setq epa-file-select-keys 2
      epa-file-encrypt-to "37AB1CB72B741E478CA026D43025DCBD46F81C0F"
      epa-cache-passphrase-for-symmetric-encryption t)

;; TODO: Configure default structure templates.
;; (require 'org-tempo)

;; Apply custom keybindings.
(dotfiles/leader
  "o" '(:ignore t :which-key "Org")
  "oe" '(org-export-dispatch :which-key "Export")
  "ot" '(org-babel-tangle :which-key "Tangle")
  "oi" '(org-toggle-inline-images :which-key "Images")
  "of" '(:ignore t :which-key "Footnotes")
  "ofn" '(org-footnote-normalize :which-key "Normalize"))

Org Roam

epkgs.org-roam
# epkgs.org-roam-ui # TODO: Provide from Github
epkgs.websocket
epkgs.simple-httpd

Org Roam59 is a plain-text knowledge management system. It borrows principles from the Zettelkasten method60, providing a solution for non-hierarchical note-taking. It should also work as a plug-and-play solution for anyone already using Org Mode58 for their personal wiki (me).

;; Setup `org-roam'.
(require 'org-roam)

;; HACK: Set up `org-roam-ui'.
(add-to-list 'load-path "~/.local/source/org-roam-ui")
(load-library "org-roam-ui")
(setq org-roam-ui-follow t
      org-roam-ui-sync-theme t
      org-roam-ui-open-on-start t
      org-roam-ui-update-on-save t
      org-roam-ui-browser-function #'browse-url-firefox)

;; Silence the migration warnings.
(setq org-roam-v2-ack t)

;; Enable completion everywhere.
(setq org-roam-completion-everywhere t)

;; Set the roam directories.
(setq org-roam-directory (expand-file-name "/etc/dotfiles")
      org-roam-dailies-directory (concat org-roam-directory "/docs/daily"))

;; Clear the deafult capture templates.
(setq org-roam-capture-templates '()
      org-roam-dailies-capture-templates '())

;; Override the default slug method.
(cl-defmethod org-roam-node-slug ((node org-roam-node))
  (let ((title (org-roam-node-title node))
        (slug-trim-chars '(768 ; U+0300 COMBINING GRAVE ACCENT
                           769 ; U+0301 COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT
                           770 ; U+0302 COMBINING CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT
                           771 ; U+0303 COMBINING TILDE
                           772 ; U+0304 COMBINING MACRON
                           774 ; U+0306 COMBINING BREVE
                           775 ; U+0307 COMBINING DOT ABOVE
                           776 ; U+0308 COMBINING DIAERESIS
                           777 ; U+0309 COMBINING HOOK ABOVE
                           778 ; U+030A COMBINING RING ABOVE
                           780 ; U+030C COMBINING CARON
                           795 ; U+031B COMBINING HORN
                           803 ; U+0323 COMBINING DOT BELOW
                           804 ; U+0324 COMBINING DIAERESIS BELOW
                           805 ; U+0325 COMBINING RING BELOW
                           807 ; U+0327 COMBINING CEDILLA
                           813 ; U+032D COMBINING CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT BELOW
                           814 ; U+032E COMBINING BREVE BELOW
                           816 ; U+0330 COMBINING TILDE BELOW
                           817 ; U+0331 COMBINING MACRON BELOW
                           )))
    (cl-flet* ((nonspacing-mark-p (char)
				  (memq char slug-trim-chars))
	       (strip-nonspacing-marks (s)
				       (ucs-normalize-NFC-string
					(apply #'string (seq-remove #'nonspacing-mark-p
								    (ucs-normalize-NFD-string s)))))
	       (cl-replace (title pair)
			   (replace-regexp-in-string (car pair) (cdr pair) title)))
      (let* ((pairs `(("[^[:alnum:][:digit:]]" . "-")  
		      ("--*" . "-")  
		      ("^-" . "")  
		      ("-$" . "")))
	     (slug (-reduce-from #'cl-replace (strip-nonspacing-marks title) pairs)))
	(downcase slug)))))

;; Configure capture templates.
;; Standard document.
(add-to-list 'org-roam-capture-templates
  '("d" "Default" plain "%?"
    :target (file+head "docs/%<%Y%m%d%H%M%S>-${slug}.org.gpg"
"
,#+TITLE: ${title}
,#+AUTHOR: Christopher James Hayward
,#+EMAIL: chris@chrishayward.xyz
"
)
    :unnarrowed t))

;; Daily notes.
(add-to-list 'org-roam-dailies-capture-templates
  '("d" "Default" entry "* %?"
    :target (file+head "%<%Y-%m-%d>.org.gpg"
"
,#+TITLE: %<%Y-%m-%d>
,#+AUTHOR: Christopher James Hayward
,#+EMAIL: chris@chrishayward.xyz
")))

;; Run the setup command.
(org-roam-setup)

;; Apply custom keybindings.
(dotfiles/leader
  "or"  '(:ignore t :which-key "Roam")
  "ori" '(org-roam-node-insert :which-key "Insert")
  "orf" '(org-roam-node-find :which-key "Find")
  "orc" '(org-roam-capture :which-key "Capture")
  "orb" '(org-roam-buffer-toggle :which-key "Buffer"))

;; Apply custom keybindings for dailies.
(dotfiles/leader
  "ord" '(:ignore t :which-key "Dailies")
  "ordd" '(org-roam-dailies-goto-date :which-key "Date")
  "ordt" '(org-roam-dailies-goto-today :which-key "Today")
  "ordm" '(org-roam-dailies-goto-tomorrow :which-key "Tomorrow")
  "ordy" '(org-roam-dailies-goto-yesterday :which-key "Yesterday"))

Org Drill

epkgs.org-drill

Org Drill61 is an extension for Org Mode58 that uses a spaced repition algorithm to conduct interactive Drill Sessions using Org files as sources of facts to be memorized.

;; Exclude :drill: items from `org-roam'.
(setq org-roam-db-node-include-function
  (defun dotfiles/org-roam-include ()
    (not (member "drill" (org-get-tags)))))

;; Configure keybindings for `org-drill'.
(dotfiles/leader
  "od" '(:ignore t :which-key "Drill")
  "odd" '(org-drill :which-key "Drill")
  "odc" '(org-drill-cram :which-key "Cram")
  "odr" '(org-drill-resume :which-key "Resume"))

Org Agenda

The way Org Mode58 works, TODO items, time-stamped items, and tagged headlines can be scattered throughout a file, or even a number of files. To get an overview of open action items, or of events that are important for a particular date, this information must be collected, sorted, and displayed in an organized way.

;; Configure `org-agenda' to use the project files.
(setq org-agenda-files '("/etc/dotfiles/"
                         "/etc/dotfiles/docs/"
                         "/etc/dotfiles/docs/daily/"))

;; Include files encrypted with `gpg'.
(require 'org)
(unless (string-match-p "\\.gpg" org-agenda-file-regexp)
  (setq org-agenda-file-regexp
    (replace-regexp-in-string "\\\\\\.org" "\\\\.org\\\\(\\\\.gpg\\\\)?"
                              org-agenda-file-regexp)))

;; Open an agenda buffer with SPC o a.
(dotfiles/leader
  "oa" '(org-agenda :which-key "Agenda"))

Org Pomodoro

epkgs.org-pomodoro

Org Pomodoro62 adds basic support for the Pomodoro Technique63 in GNU/Emacs2. It can be started for the task at point, or the last task time was clocked for. Each session starts a timer of 25 minutes, finishing with a break of 5 minutes. After 4 sessions, ther will be a break of 20 minutes. All values are customizable.

;; Configure `org-pomodor' with the overtime workflow.
(setq org-pomodoro-manual-break t
      org-pomodoro-keep-killed-time t)

;; Configure keybindings.
(dotfiles/leader
  "op" '(org-pomodoro :which-key "Pomodoro"))

Writegood Mode

epkgs.writegood-mode

Writegood Mode64 is an Emacs2 minor mode to aid in finding common writing problems. It highlights the text based on the following criteria:

  • Weasel Words

  • Passive Voice

  • Duplicate Words

;; Configure `writegood-mode'.
(dotfiles/leader
  "tg" '(writegood-mode :which-key "Grammar"))

Aspell

pkgs.aspell
pkgs.aspellDicts.en
pkgs.aspellDicts.en-science
pkgs.aspellDicts.en-computers

GNU Aspell65 is a Free and Open Source spell checker designed to replace ISpell. It can be used as a library, or an independent spell checker. Its main feature is that it does a superior job of suggesting possible replacements for mis-spelled words than any other spell checker for the English language.

;; Use `aspell' as a drop-in replacement for `ispell'.
(setq ispell-program-name "aspell"
      ispell-eextra-args '("--sug-mode=fast"))

;; Configure the built-in `flyspell-mode'.
(dotfiles/leader
  "ts" '(flyspell-mode :which-key "Spelling"))

TexLive

TeX Live66 is a free software distributution for the TeX typesetting system that includes major TeX-related programs, macro packages, and fonts. Since TeX Live consists of thousands of packages, to make managing it easier, NixOS replicates the organization of Tex Live into schemes and collections67:

Name Derivation Comment
Full texlive.combined.scheme-full Contains every TeX Live package
Medium texlive.combined.scheme-medium Contains everything in small + more packages and languages
Small texlive.combined.scheme-small Contains everything in basic + xetex + metapost
Basic texlive.combined.scheme-basic Contains everything in the plain scheme but includes latex
Minimal texlive.combined.scheme-minimal Contains plain only
pkgs.texlive.combined.scheme-full

Http

epkgs.ob-http

It's possible to make HTTP requests from Org Mode buffers using ob-http68, this relies on Org Babel being present and configured properly.

;; Required to setup `ob-http'.
(org-babel-do-load-languages
  'org-babel-load-languages
  '((http . t)))

Hugo

epkgs.ox-hugo

Ox-Hugo69 is an Org-Mode58 exporter for Hugo30 compabile markdown. My dotfiles are a result of this, and are available to view here https://chrishayward.xyz/dotfiles/.

;; Configure `ox-hugo' as an `org-mode-export' backend.
(require 'ox-hugo)

;; Set up the base directory.
(setq org-hugo-base-dir (expand-file-name "/etc/dotfiles/docs"))

;; Capture templates.
;; Shared content
;; (add-to-list 'org-roam-capture-templates
;;   '("p" "Post" plain "%?"
;;     :target (file+head "docs/posts/${slug}.org.gpg"
;; "
;; ,#+TITLE: ${title}
;; ,#+AUTHOR: Christopher James Hayward
;; ,#+DATE: %<%Y-%m-%d>

;; ,#+EXPORT_FILE_NAME: ${slug}
;; ,#+OPTIONS: num:nil todo:nil tasks:nil

;; ,#+ROAM_KEY: https://chrishayward.xyz/posts/${slug}/

;; ,#+HUGO_BASE_DIR: ../
;; ,#+HUGO_AUTO_SET_LASTMOD: t
;; ,#+HUGO_SECTION: posts
;; ,#+HUGO_DRAFT: true
;; "
;; )
;;     :unnarrowed t))

Passwords

pkgs.pass

With Pass70, each password lives inside of an encrypted gpg file, whose name is the title of the website or resource that requires the password. These encrypted files may be organized into meaningful folder hierarchies, compies from computer to computer, and in general, manipulated using standard command line tools.

epkgs.password-store

Configure keybindings for passwords behind SPC p:

;; Set the path to the password store.
(setq password-store-dir (expand-file-name "~/.password-store"))

;; Apply custom keybindings.
(dotfiles/leader
  "p" '(:ignore t :which-key "Passwords")
  "pp" '(password-store-copy :which-key "Copy")
  "pe" '(password-store-edit :which-key "Edit")
  "pi" '(password-store-insert :which-key "Insert")
  "pr" '(password-store-rename :which-key "Rename")
  "pg" '(password-store-generate :which-key "Generate"))

Docker

epkgs.docker
epkgs.dockerfile-mode

Manage Docker from inside of Emacs using Docker.el71. This is a full docker porcelain similar to Magit, allowing complete control of a Docker system. Add syntax highlighting to Dockerfiles using dockerfile-mode72 from Spotify.

;; Apply custom keybindings.
(dotfiles/leader
  "n" '(:ignore t :which-key "Containers")
  "nd" '(docker :which-key "Docker"))

MU4E

pkgs.mu
pkgs.isync
epkgs.mu4e-alert
# Deploy the authinfo file.
home.file.".authinfo.gpg".source = ../config/authinfo.gpg;

# Deploy the isync configuration file.
home.file.".mbsyncrc" = {
  text = ''
    IMAPStore xyz-remote
    Host mail.chrishayward.xyz
    User chris@chrishayward.xyz
    PassCmd "pass chrishayward.xyz/chris"
    SSLType IMAPS
    
    MaildirStore xyz-local
    Path ~/.cache/mail/
    Inbox ~/.cache/mail/inbox
    SubFolders Verbatim
    
    Channel xyz
    Far :xyz-remote:
    Near :xyz-local:
    Patterns * !Archives
    Create Both
    Expunge Both
    SyncState *
  '';
};
mbsync -a
mu init --maildir="~/.cache/mail" --my-address="chris@chrishayward.xyz"
mu index
;; Add the `mu4e' shipped with `mu' to the load path.
(add-to-list 'load-path "/etc/profiles/per-user/chris/share/emacs/site-lisp/mu4e/")
(require 'mu4e)

;; Confiugure `mu4e'.
(setq mu4e-maildir "~/.cache/mail"
      mu4e-update-interval (* 5 60)
      mu4e-get-mail-command "mbsync -a"
      mu4e-compose-format-flowed t
      mu4e-change-filenames-when-moving t
      mu4e-compose-signature (concat "Chris Hayward\n"
                                     "chris@chrishayward.xyz"))

;; Sign all outbound email with GPG.
(add-hook 'message-send-hook 'mml-secure-message-sign-pgpmime)
(setq message-send-mail-function 'smtpmail-send-it
      mml-secure-openpgp-signers '("37AB1CB72B741E478CA026D43025DCBD46F81C0F"))

;; Setup `mu4e' accounts.
(setq mu4e-contexts
  (list
    ;; Main
    ;; chris@chrishayward.xyz
    (make-mu4e-context
      :name "Main"
      :match-func
        (lambda (msg)
          (when msg
            (string-prefix-p "/Main" (mu4e-message-field msg :maildir))))
      :vars
        '((user-full-name . "Christopher James Hayward")
          (user-mail-address . "chris@chrishayward.xyz")
          (smtpmail-smtp-server . "mail.chrishayward.xyz")
          (smtpmail-smtp-service . 587)
          (smtpmail-stream-type . starttls)))))

;; Setup `mu4e-alert'.
(setq mu4e-alert-set-default-style 'libnotify)
(mu4e-alert-enable-notifications)
(mu4e-alert-enable-mode-line-display)

;; Open the `mu4e' dashboard.
(dotfiles/leader
  "m" '(mu4e :which-key "Mail"))

Projectile

epkgs.projectile

Projectile73 is a project interaction library for GNU/Emacs2. Its goal is to provide a nice set of features operating on a project level, without introducing external dependencies.

;; Configure the `projectile-project-search-path'.
(setq projectile-project-search-path '("~/.local/source"))
(projectile-mode +1)

LSP Mode

epkgs.lsp-mode
epkgs.lsp-ui

The Language Server Protocol (LSP)74 defines the protocol used between an Editor or IDE, and a language server that provides features like:

  • Auto Complete

  • Go To Defintion

  • Find All References

;; Configure `lsp-mode'.
(setq lsp-idle-delay 0.5
      lsp-prefer-flymake t)

;; Configure `lsp-ui'.
(setq lsp-ui-doc-position 'at-point
      lsp-ui-doc-delay 0.5)

CCLS

epkgs.ccls

Emacs CCLS75 is a client for CCLS, a C/C++/Objective-C language server supporting multi-million line C++ code bases, powered by libclang.

;; Configure `ccls' to work with `lsp-mode'.
(defun dotfiles/ccls-hook ()
  (require 'ccls)
  (lsp))

;; Configure `ccls' mode hooks.
(add-hook 'c-mode-hook 'dotfiles/ccls-hook)
(add-hook 'c++-mode-hook 'dotfiles/ccls-hook)
(add-hook 'objc-mode-hook 'dotfiles/ccls-hook)
(add-hook 'cuda-mode-hook 'dotfiles/ccls-hook)

Company Mode

epkgs.company

Company76 is a text completion framework for GNU/Emacs2. The name stands for Complete Anything. It uses pluggable back-ends and front-ends to retieve and display completion candidates.

;; Configure `company-mode'.
(setq company-backend 'company-capf
      lsp-completion-provider :capf)

;; Enable it globally.
(global-company-mode +1)

Go Mode

epkgs.go-mode

Go Mode77 is a major mode for editing Golang8 source code in GNU/Emacs2.

;; Configure `go-mode' to work with `lsp-mode'.
(defun dotfiles/go-hook ()
  (add-hook 'before-save-hook #'lsp-format-buffer t t)
  (add-hook 'before-save-hook #'lsp-organize-imports t t))

;; Configure a custom `before-save-hook'.
(add-hook 'go-mode-hook #'dotfiles/go-hook)

Rustic

epkgs.rustic

Rustic76 is a fork of rust-mode that integrates well with the Language Server Protocol70. Include the rust shell before launching GNU/Emacs2 to use this!

;; Configure `rustic' with `lsp-mode'.
(setq rustic-format-on-save t
      rustic-lsp-server 'rls)

Python Mode

epkgs.pretty-mode

The built in Python Mode78 has a nice feature set for working with Python15 code in GNU/Emacs2. It is complimented with the addition of an LSP74 server. These tools are included in the Development Shell7 for Python15.

;; Configure `pretty-mode' to work with `python-mode'.
(add-hook 'python-mode-hook
  (lambda ()
    (turn-on-pretty-mode)))

Protobuf Mode

epkgs.protobuf-mode

PlantUML

pkgs.plantuml

PlantUML79 is an open-source tool allowing users to create diagrams from a plain-text language. Besides various UML diagrams, PlantUML79 has support for various other software developmented related formats, as well as visualizations of JSON and YAML files.

epkgs.plantuml-mode

PlantUML Mode80 is a major mode for editing PlantUML79 sources in GNU/Emacs2.

;; Configure `plantuml-mode'.
(add-to-list 'org-src-lang-modes '("plantuml" . plantuml))
(org-babel-do-load-languages 'org-babel-load-languages '((plantuml . t)))
(setq plantuml-default-exec-mode 'executable
      org-plantuml-exec-mode 'plantuml)

Swiper

epkgs.ivy
epkgs.counsel
epkgs.ivy-rich
epkgs.ivy-posframe
epkgs.ivy-prescient

Ivy (Swiper)81 is a generic completion mechanism for GNU/Emacs2. While operating similarily to other completion schemes like icomplete-mode, it aims to be more efficient, smaller, simpler, and smoother to use, while remaining highly customizable.

;; Configure `ivy'.
(setq counsel-linux-app-format-function
  #'counsel-linux-app-format-function-name-only)
(ivy-mode +1)
(counsel-mode +1)

;; Configure `ivy-rich'.
(ivy-rich-mode +1)

;; Configure `ivy-posframe'.
(setq ivy-posframe-parameters '((parent-frame nil))
      ivy-posframe-display-functions-alist '((t . ivy-posframe-display)))
(ivy-posframe-mode +1)

;; Configure `ivy-prescient'.
(setq ivy-prescient-enable-filtering nil)
(ivy-prescient-mode +1)

Transparency

It's possible to control the frame opacity in GNU/Emacs2. Unlike other transparency hacks, it's not merely showing the desktop background image, but is true transparency – you can se other windows behind the Emacs2 window.

;; Configure the default frame transparency.
(set-frame-parameter (selected-frame) 'alpha '(95 . 95))
(add-to-list 'default-frame-alist '(alpha . (95 . 95)))

Desktop Environment

pkgs.brightnessctl

The Desktop Environment82 package provides commands and a global minor mode for controlling your GNU/Linux27 desktop from within GNU/Emacs2.

epkgs.desktop-environment

You can control the brightness, volume, take screenshots, and lock / unlock the screen. The package depends on the availability of shell commands to do the heavy lifting. They can be changed by customizing the appropriate variables.

;; Configure `desktop-environment'.
(require 'desktop-environment)
(desktop-environment-mode +1)

Doom Themes

epkgs.doom-themes

Doom Themes83 is a theme megapack for GNU/Emacs2, inspired by community favourites.

;; Include modern themes from `doom-themes'.
(setq doom-themes-enable-bold t
      doom-themes-enable-italic t)

;; Load the `doom-nord' and `doom-nord-light' themes.
;; (load-theme 'doom-nord-light t)
(load-theme 'doom-nord t)
(doom-modeline-mode +1)

;; Load a new theme with <SPC> t t.
(dotfiles/leader
  "tt" '(counsel-load-theme :which-key "Theme"))

Doom Modeline

epkgs.doom-modeline

Doom Modeline83 is a fancy and fast modeline inspired by minimalism design. It's integrated into Centaur Emacs, Doom Emacs, and Spacemacs.

;; Add the `doom-modeline' after initialization.
(add-hook 'after-init-hook 'doom-modeline-mode)
(setq doom-modeline-height 16
      doom-modeline-icon t)

Footnotes