# Edit this configuration file to define what should be installed on # your system. Help is available in the configuration.nix(5) man page # and in the NixOS manual (accessible by running ‘nixos-help’). { pkgs, ... }: let fix-vscode = pkgs.writeScriptBin "fix-vscode" '' #!${pkgs.stdenv.shell} # Check if vscode-server dir exists if [[ -d "$HOME/.vscode-server/bin" ]]; then # For every bin folder within for versiondir in "$HOME"/.vscode-server/bin/*; do # Remove bundled node (dynamic links are borked for nix) rm "$versiondir/node" # symlink node form the nixpkg ln -s "${pkgs.nodejs-16_x}/bin/node" "$versiondir/node" done fi ''; in { imports = [ # Include the results of the hardware scan. ./hardware-configuration.nix ]; # Use the GRUB 2 boot loader. boot.loader.grub.enable = true; boot.loader.grub.version = 2; boot.loader.grub.device = "/dev/sda"; # This value determines the NixOS release from which the default # settings for stateful data, like file locations and database versions # on your system were taken. It‘s perfectly fine and recommended to leave # this value at the release version of the first install of this system. # Before changing this value read the documentation for this option # (e.g. man configuration.nix or on https://nixos.org/nixos/options.html). system.stateVersion = "22.11"; # Did you read the comment? virtualisation.podman.enable = true; # Additional packages environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [ binutils fix-vscode fluxcd k9s kubectl kubectx nix-prefetch-git nixpkgs-fmt nixpkgs-review ripgrep rsync tmux vault vim ]; programs.gnupg.agent = { enable = true; pinentryFlavor = "curses"; }; home-manager.useGlobalPkgs = true; home-manager.useUserPackages = true; home-manager.users.victor = import ./home.nix; }