NixOS configuration and other dotfiles
- My Awesome config is based on the "rainbow" theme of awesome-copycats
- My Rofi themes are based on the "rounded" theme of rofi-themes-collection
- The wallpapers in
wallpapers/nixos/
are modified versions ofnix-wallpaper-nineish-dark-gray
of nixos-artwork
Showcase-v2.0.0.mp4
Showcase-v1.0.0.mp4
- This repo contains configuration files I daily drive on multiple machines, including Windows ones through WSL. Its purpose is:
- providing version control for my config files
- serving as documentation and inspiration for customizing your system
- With this repo you get a Flake-based NixOS configuration that includes...
- two fully functional desktop sessions:
- Awesome + Picom (on Xorg)
- Hyprland (on Wayland)
- => See Installation (Desktop)
- a nice WSL setup
- => See Installation (WSL)
- two fully functional desktop sessions:
- See Content overview for explanations of files and directories in this repo.
⚠️ Basic knowledge of NixOS usage, including Nix flakes, is needed for all of the provided installation guides.
devices/
contains device-specific configmisc/
contains... miscellaneous thingsmodules/
contains Nix modules as well as config files for the software the module configurespackages/
contains Nix packages that I maintain locally as they do not have an official counterpartwallpapers/
should be self-explanatory
File | Description |
---|---|
devices/[DEVICE]/fastfetch/ |
Device-specific fastfetch configurations |
misc/update/ |
Scripts to automatically update and clean up NixOS after a prompt every saturday |
misc/autostart.sh |
Shell script that Awesome and Hyprland run on startup |
misc/notification.wav |
Notification sound |
modules/alacritty/alacritty.toml |
Alacritty configuration |
modules/awesome/ |
Awesome configuration including a custom theme based on awesome-copycats' "rainbow" theme |
modules/copyq/copyq.conf |
CopyQ configuration with custom theme |
modules/eww/ |
Eww configuration with custom widgets |
modules/firefox/firefox.css |
userChrome.css for Firefox |
modules/fish/init.fish |
config.fish for Fish |
modules/gitnuro/gitnuro.json |
Gitnuro theme |
modules/hyprland/hyprland.conf |
Hyprland configuration |
modules/jetbrains/.ideavimrc |
Like .vimrc , but for IntelliJ IDEA using IdeaVim |
modules/picom/picom.conf |
picom (jonaburg-fork) configuration |
modules/rofi/ |
Rofi (Wayland fork) themes |
modules/sddm-sugar-candy/sddm-sugar-candy.conf |
sddm-sugar-candy configuration |
modules/starship/starship.toml |
Starship configuration |
modules/swaylock-effects/swaylock-effects.sh |
Shell script to call Swaylock-effects with custom options |
modules/swaync/ |
SwayNotificationCenter configuration with custom theme |
modules/vim/.vimrc |
Vim configuration |
modules/vscodium/vscodium.json |
settings.json for VSCodium |
wallpapers/nixos/ |
NixOS logo wallpapers in all kinds of color combinations |
- The following guide explains installation on a NixOS desktop system.
⚠️ I try to make this config as modular and hardware independent as it makes sense for my time, but you might still have to change some things to make it work with your hardware. The current configuration assumes:- a dual-monitor setup (for some later mentioned keybinds)
- a stationary/dektop system (you could try it out on a portable system, but would probably miss things like a battery or wifi indicator)
- If you still want to try setting this up, here you go...
First install NixOS and set it up far enough to have git
, a network connection and a text editor available.
Place the content of this repository inside /etc/dotfiles/
:
cd /etc
# clone specific release (you know what you get, but v1.0.0 might not work anymore)
git clone --branch v2.0.0 --depth 1 --recurse-submodules https://github.com/julius-boettger/dotfiles.git
# clone current commit (although you don't know what you get)
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/julius-boettger/dotfiles.git
chown -R $USER:root /etc/dotfiles # make editing files more comfortable (don't require sudo)
chmod -R 755 /etc/dotfiles # should already be set like this
# copy over your hardware-configuration.nix (!)
cp -f /etc/nixos/hardware-configuration.nix /etc/dotfiles/devices/desktop/
Paths like
devices/desktop/default.nix
are referencing this the content of this repo, which should now be in/etc/dotfiles/
, so the full path in this case would be/etc/dotfiles/devices/desktop/default.nix
.
If you search for xrandr
in modules/awesome/rc.lua
(or devices/desktop/default.nix
) you will find two commands which are for my specific dual-monitor setup. The idea is that one command configures both monitors and the other just the primary monitor, so that the secondary monitor is toggleable by pressing Super+P. If you want to use this functionality you will have to adjust the commands for your specific setup. But you can also just leave them like that and don't press Super+P.
It's pretty much the same thing for my Hyprland config, but I extracted the device specific stuff into two variables called second_monitor
and second_monitor_config
, which I set in devices/desktop/hyprland.conf
. The config there shows what works for my setup, you may need to change it for yours.
There are some files you now should take a look at and adjust them to your liking:
variables.nix
(should explain itself)devices/desktop/default.nix
contains some device-specific configuration like mounting a partition. You may pick and choose what seems useful to you, or just delete it.- Of course you may also want to look at and change every other file ;)
Then rebuild your system with sudo nixos-rebuild switch --flake /etc/dotfiles#desktop --impure
. After you've done this once, flake-rebuild
should be available as a shorthand that serves the same purpose.
Next: reboot
for good measure.
Set Gitnuro theme: Run Gitnuro, open the settings and click the "Open file" button next to "Custom theme". Select modules/gitnuro/gitnuro.json
and click on "Accept".
To set a wallpaper for SDDM (the display manager) either put a login.jpg
in wallpapers/
or adjust the path to the wallpaper at the top of modules/sddm-sugar-candy/sddm-sugar-candy.conf
.
By default, both the Awesome and the Hyprland session use a random wallpaper out of wallpapers/nixos/
on every reload. But there's an easy way to set up your own wallpapers on Hyprland: Put just one (or multiple!) in wallpapers/misc/
. A random one will be selected on each reload if you have multiple. You can also configure corresponding accent colors for each wallpaper that will be used e.g. for the client border color. To do this, ajdust modules/hyprland/wallpaper.py
. You will figure it out.
If you notice that the mouse cursor looks different when hovering over some apps, try setting it with nwg-look
(Wayland) or lxappearance
(Xorg).
And then you should be all set up! Feel free to reach out if there's something missing, misleading or incorrect in this installation guide. (Also reach out if you know how to automate any step of this setup further!)
Installation (WSL)
The following guide explains installation on a Windows system through NixOS on WSL.
First, make sure WSL is installed and up to date:
wsl --install --no-distribution
wsl --update
Also make sure to reboot your system to complete the setup (yes, that is necessary).
Then setup a NixOS distribution, but be careful when executing a command containing a path like .\NixOS\
, you probably want to change that to an absolute path where the installed files can reside permanently, like C:\Users\[YOUR-USER]\Documents\WSL\NixOS\
.
Now enter your NixOS WSL system with wsl -d NixOS
, or just with wsl
if you ran wsl --set-default NixOS
before.
Run sudo nix-channel --update
. If you run into errors like unable to download [...]: Couldn't resolve host name
: Make sure you are not connected to some regulated company network for the rest of this guide, then edit /etc/resolv.conf
and check that the only uncommented lines in that file are to configure nameservers, e.g. to use google nameservers:
nameserver 8.8.4.4
nameserver 8.8.8.8
Then run sudo nix-channel --update
again.
Now run some more commands to setup my config:
cd /etc
nix-shell -p git --run "sudo git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/julius-boettger/dotfiles.git"
chown -R $USER:root /etc/dotfiles # make editing files more comfortable (don't require sudo)
chmod -R 755 /etc/dotfiles # should already be set like this
You now should take a look at variables.nix
, which should explain its content itself. Of course you may also want to look at and change every other file ;)
Then rebuild your system with
nix-shell -p git --run "sudo nixos-rebuild switch --flake /etc/dotfiles#wsl"
To see the effects, exit your current WSL session (e.g. with exit
), force WSL to shutdown (to achieve a restart) with wsl --shutdown
and then start a new session (e.g. with wsl -d NixOS
).
You should be greeted by a nice little fastfetch
now! flake-rebuild
should also be available as a shorthand that serves the same purpose as the long rebuild command above.
At this point it should also be fine to connect to a regulated company network again, reaching the internet should still be possible.
If using your companys VPN ever causes networking issues, use vpn-start
/vpn-stop
to start/stop wsl-vpnkit
(vpn-status
is also available).