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MiSumiSumi edited this page Jun 30, 2024 · 12 revisions

NixOS Support (via home-manager)

This repository contains the homeManagerModule for home-manager using flakes. No matter which OS you are using, you can use this configuration out of the box, as long as you use home-manager to manage your environment.

Prerequisites

Add the home-manager URL and nvimdots to inputs in the top-level flake.nix. Next, add the following snippets to your configuration.nix and nvimdots.nix. Re-login to your shell after executing nixos-rebuild switch --flake <flake-url> or home-manager switch --flake <flake-url>.

  • flake.nix
{
  inputs = {
    nixpkgs.url = "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixos-unstable";
    nvimdots.url = "github:ayamir/nvimdots";
    home-manager = {
      url = "github:nix-community/home-manager";
      nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
    };
    # ...
  };
  # ...
}
{
  # Other contents...
  programs.nix-ld.enable = true;
  # ...
}
  • nvimdots.nix
    • setBuildEnv: If set, automatically configures your $CPATH, $CPLUG_INCLUDE_PATH, $LD_LIBLARY_PATH, $LIBRARY_PATH, $NIX_LD_LIBRARY_PATH, and $PKG_CONFIG_PATH.
    • withBuildTools: If set, automatically installs some build utils such as gcc and pkg-config.
    • Caveats:
      • setBuildEnv and withBuildTools is only required on NixOS. Q&A for this details
      • These are required tooling so that mason.nvim and nvim-treesitter can work as expected.
      • They bundle with neovim and won't affect other sessions.
{
  programs.neovim.nvimdots = {
    enable = true;
    setBuildEnv = true;  # Only needed for NixOS
    withBuildTools = true; # Only needed for NixOS
  };
}

dotnet installation and environment variables

This repository provides programs.dotnet.dev to manage dotnet installation and environment variables inspired by programs.java in home-manager. See dotnet/default.nix for a list of available options.

programs.dotnet.dev = {
  enabled = true;
  environmentVariables = {
    DOTNET_SYSTEM_GLOBALIZATION_INVARIANT = "0";  # Will set environment variables for DotNET.
  };
}

Strict plugin management

By default, lazy-lock.json is not shared between machines. This is because placing it under nix's control would make it a read-only file, making it difficult to update at will. This goes against the nix ethos in terms of reproducibility, but it is a trade-off for convenience.

If you want more strict management that ensures reproducibility, you can set programs.neovim.nvimdots.bindLazyLock=true and place the file under nix management.
Running :Lazy restore restores the plugin versions. You will get an error that it is a read-only file, but this can be ignored. The following sample workflow updates the plugin version regularly.

sample github workflow
name: auto merge upstream
on:
  workflow_dispatch: # allows manual triggering
  schedule:
    - cron: "0 17 * * 5"

permissions:
  contents: write
  pull-requests: write
jobs:
  auto-merge-upstream:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v4
        with:
          fetch-depth: 0

      - uses: andstor/file-existence-action@v3
        id: check_lockfile
        with:
          files: "lazy-lock.json"

      - name: Merge upstream
        id: merge-upstream
        continue-on-error: true
        run: |
          git config --global user.email "41898282+github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com"
          git config --global user.name "github-actions[bot]"

          git remote add upstream https://github.com/ayamir/nvimdots.git
          git fetch upstream
          git merge upstream/main --allow-unrelated-histories --no-commit --no-ff

          git reset HEAD lazy-lock.json

          git checkout lazy-lock.json

      - uses: rhysd/action-setup-vim@v1
        if: steps.check_lockfile.outputs.files_exists == 'true'
        with:
          neovim: true

      - name: Run lockfile-autoupdate
        if: steps.check_lockfile.outputs.files_exists == 'true'
        timeout-minutes: 5
        run: |
          ./scripts/install.sh
          nvim --headless "+Lazy! update" +qa
          cp -pv "${HOME}/.config/nvim/lazy-lock.json" .
          git add lazy-lock.json

      - uses: stefanzweifel/git-auto-commit-action@v5
        if: steps.check_lockfile.outputs.files_exists == 'true' || steps.merge-upstream.outcome == 'success'
        with:
          commit_message: "chore: auto merge upstream and update lazy-lock.json"
          commit_user_name: "github-actions[bot]"
          commit_user_email: "41898282+github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com"
          commit_author: "github-actions[bot] <41898282+github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>"

Balancing flexibility

You can set programs.neovim.nvimdots.mergeLazyLock=true, if you want to allow changes using lazy.nvim while still managing versions. This option has the following logic:

  1. lazy-lock.json in the repository is managed as lazy-lock.fixed.json in /nix/store.
  2. Not existing lazy-lock.json under ${XDG_CONFIG_DIR}/nvim, copy to then. (probably for first time.)
  3. Existing lazy-lock.json under then, one of the following will be executed.
  4. When the hash of lazy-lock.fixed.json changes (i.e. when the upstream lazy-lock.json is changed),
    Creating new lazy-lock.json by merged lazy-lock.fixed.json to existing lazy-lock.json (not managed by nix) under then.
    In this case, the version in lazy-lock.fixed.json takes precedence. This means that plugins that are already managed upstream will have the lazy-lock.fixed.json version prioritized, and new plugins added that haven't yet been pushed upstream will be preserved.
  5. When the hash of lazy-lock.fixed.json no changes (i.e. when the upstream lazy-lock.json is not changed), lazy-lock.json under ${XDG_CONFIG_DIR}/nvim is unchanged.
    This means that your local changes will be preserved until lazy-lock.json is changed upstream.

If you want to pin the package version in lazy-lock.json permanent, push your local lazy-lock.json to the your repository.

If you have made local changes but would like to revert to the upstream version, follow these steps:

  1. unlink ${XDG_CONFIG_DIR}/nvim/lazy-lock.fixed.json
  2. Run systemctl restart home-manager-<user>.service (NixOS) or
    home-manager generations | head -n1 | awk -F '-> ' '{print $2 "/activate"}' (standalone home-manager).

Customize your experience (Available Options)

Have a look at default.nix (selection) for more information.

FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)

mason.nvim cannot build some of the packages or execute those installed binaries

This is because some dependencies are not distributed along with the system - NixOS does not conform to the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (FHS), so some ingenuity is required.

This homeManagerModule provides several options to simplify dependency resolution. Nevertheless, you may still use programs.neovim.extraPackages, programs.neovim.extraPython3Packages, programs.neovim.extraLuaPackages provided by home-manager.

  • nvimdots.nix
{pkgs, ...}:
{
  programs.neovim.nvimdots = {
    enable = true;
    setBuildEnv = true;
    withBuildTools = true;
    withHaskell = true; # If you want to use Haskell.
    extraHaskellPackages = hsPkgs: []; # Configure packages for Haskell (nixpkgs.haskellPackages).
    extraDependentPackages = with pkgs; [] # Properly setup the directory hierarchy (`lib`, `include`, and `pkgconfig`).
  }
}

How to add dependencies?

You should include the necessary packages for building this dependency, including include, lib, and pkgconfig requirements, in programs.neovim.extraDependentPackages.

  • As an example, for runtime dependencies, add the corresponding dependencies to home.packages or programs.neovim.extraPackages.
  • NOTE: home.packages is effective inside the user scope whereas programs.neovim.extraPackages is effective inside the entire neovim scope. Some languages may also require the use of wrapper, see below example for details.
{ pkgs, ... }:
{
  # Install to the user scope.
  home.packages = with pkgs; [
    go
  ];
  programs.neovim = {
    # Packages only accessible from neovim
    nvimdots = {
      # Packages that require `include`, `lib`, `pkgconfig`
      extraDependentPackages = with pkgs; [ icu ];
      # Haskell packages can be easily installed with the `nvimdots` options.
      extraHaskellPackages = hs: with hs; [ ghcup ];
    };
    extraPackages = with pkgs; [
      go

      # Some languages require the use of wrapper.
      rWrapper.override
      {
        packages = with pkgs.rPackages;
          [ xml2 lintr roxygen2 ];
      }
    ];
    # Python and Lua packages can be easily installed with the corresponding `home-manager` options.
    extraPython3Packages = ps: with ps; [
      numpy
    ];
  };
}

How to check if a binary can run on NixOS

Contains a verification script.
Running script with nix run github:ayamir/nvimdots#check-linker that can be used to check ${XDG_DATA_DIR}/nvim/mason/bin directory (the default on Linux is XDG_DATA_DIR=~/.local/share) for missing symlinks. If NVIM_APPNAME environment variable is set, the script will check ${XDG_DATA_DIR}/${NVIM_APPNAME}/mason/bin directory instead.

How to check settings and plugin changes in advance

Contains a minimal shell environment trying ayamir/nvimdots.Build the environment with nix develop github:ayamir/nvimdots.
Since NVIM_APPNAME=nvimdots is set, it will not conflict with the existing neovim environment. Plugins download to ${XDG_DATA_DIR}/nvimdots.
If you want to try your own settings, after cloning the repository, edit lua/user and nixos/testEnv.nix and run nix develop .#default.

Required packages for building mason.nvim's dependent sources (as of 2023/08/19)

This list is incomplete - not all mason.nvim's dependent sources are tracked and included. You can help by adding missing items.

Language extraPackages extraDependentPackages
Go - hunspell
PHP php phpPackages.composer -
R rWrapper.override { packages = with pkgs.rPackages; [ xml2 lintr roxygen2 ]; } -
Vala meson vala vala jsonrpc-glib

How to check for the list of required dependencies (for mason.nvim's packages)

  • For binaries, patchelf --print-needed <binary> will list the required packages.
  • You can also check the information used by ldd in this package and/or dynamiclib with ldd <binary>.
  • You can check the list of dependencies required during build time using the build log (via mason.nvim's UI).
  • If this dependency is included in nixpkgs, you may be able to find the package you need by looking at the *.nix sources.
  • If you want to be on the safe side, here is a list of dependencies for all packages that have already been registered in mason-registry:
libamd     <==> https://github.com/zship/libamd
libc       <==> https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/
  [OR] libc++ <==> https://libcxx.llvm.org/
libevent   <==> https://libevent.org/
libiconv   <==> https://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/
libmsgpack <==> http://msgpack.org/
libz       <==> https://www.zlib.net/
libzstd    <==> https://github.com/facebook/zstd

What to do if you can't build a package via mason.nvim

If it is provided by nixpkgs, you should be able to use it by adding the following settings. This is the same as setting up other packages that require external installation:

-- Setup lsps that are not supported by `mason.nvim` but supported by `nvim-lspconfig` here.
if vim.fn.executable("dart") == 1 then
	local _opts = require("completion.servers.dartls")
	local final_opts = vim.tbl_deep_extend("keep", _opts, opts)
	nvim_lsp.dartls.setup(final_opts)
end

Something is wrong with the plugin

NixOS (home-manager) creates a symbolic link to a read-only file, so lazy.nvim cannot write to the file and cannot manage packages. This implementation avoids linking lazy-lock.json by default.
Therefore, it is possible that a package newer than lazy-lock.json managed by ayamir/nvimdots has been installed, and that it does not work because a breaking change has been made in that package.
Copy lazy-lock.json from ayamir/nvimdots to XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nvim and start neovim again to check if it works.

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