This solves the dependency cycle in gcr alternatively so there won't be
two gnupg store paths in a standard NixOS system which has udisks2 enabled
by default.
NixOS users are expected to use the gpg-agent user service to pull in the
appropriate pinentry flavour or install it on their systemPackages and set
it in their local gnupg agent config instead.
Co-authored-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>
This solves the dependency cycle in gcr alternatively so there won't be
two gnupg store paths in a standard NixOS system which has udisks2 enabled
by default.
NixOS users are expected to use the gpg-agent user service to pull in the
appropriate pinentry flavour or install it on their systemPackages and set
it in their local gnupg agent config instead.
Co-authored-by: Florian Klink <flokli@flokli.de>
This enlarges the system uid/gid range 6-fold, from 100 to 600 ids. This
is a preventative measure against running out of dynamically allocated
ids for NixOS services with isSystemUser, which should become the
preferred way of allocating uids for non-real users.
We had these set so gtk2 can discover themes properly, however we failed
realize that gtk2 already has a patch that makes it search in XDG_DATA_DIRS.
I don't believe any issue is solved by setting these.
In fact, don't create them at all because Nix does that automatically.
Also remove modules/programs/shell.nix because everything it did is
now done automatically by Nix.
That's one of my itches - when I'm sshing from Emacs' term to a NixOS
machine, it doesn't detect that I'm running emacs and showing a title
escape sequence. This commit fixes it, checking against $TERM to
prevent this from ever bothering anyone again.
Previously, we were only adding profile-relative paths to XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
variable. That required very ugly hacks like
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/33282#issuecomment-524550842
to be able to configure XDG stuff.
Now, we are prepending the variable with /etc/xdg, allowing us to
simply use `environment.etc."xdg/…"` options.
For a long time, TRAMP has not worked with ZSH NixOS servers. I
thought I fixed this in 0740f57e63af61694d14796286cb9204, but now
realize that was only half the problem. For TRAMP to start working
again ‘unsetopt zle’ was needed, otherwise the connection would hang.
In addition, I have a few more settings added that can apparenty
interfere with these settings.
This module obsoletes services.gnome3.gnome-terminal-server
as that's a confusing option for users, and sounds internal.
It's much simpler to have a gnome-terminal module.