Home Manager currently installs packages into the user environment,
precisely as if the packages were installed through
nix-env --install
. This means that you will get a collision error if
your Home Manager configuration attempts to install a package that you
already have installed manually, that is, packages that shows up when
you run nix-env --query
.
For example, imagine you have the hello
package installed in your
environment
$ nix-env --query
hello-2.10
and your Home Manager configuration contains
home.packages = [ pkgs.hello ];
Then attempting to switch to this configuration will result in an error similar to
$ home-manager switch
these derivations will be built:
/nix/store/xg69wsnd1rp8xgs9qfsjal017nf0ldhm-home-manager-path.drv
[…]
Activating installPackages
replacing old ‘home-manager-path’
installing ‘home-manager-path’
building path(s) ‘/nix/store/b5c0asjz9f06l52l9812w6k39ifr49jj-user-environment’
Wide character in die at /nix/store/64jc9gd2rkbgdb4yjx3nrgc91bpjj5ky-buildenv.pl line 79.
collision between ‘/nix/store/fmwa4axzghz11cnln5absh31nbhs9lq1-home-manager-path/bin/hello’ and ‘/nix/store/c2wyl8b9p4afivpcz8jplc9kis8rj36d-hello-2.10/bin/hello’; use ‘nix-env --set-flag priority NUMBER PKGNAME’ to change the priority of one of the conflicting packages
builder for ‘/nix/store/b37x3s7pzxbasfqhaca5dqbf3pjjw0ip-user-environment.drv’ failed with exit code 2
error: build of ‘/nix/store/b37x3s7pzxbasfqhaca5dqbf3pjjw0ip-user-environment.drv’ failed
The solution is typically to uninstall the package from the
environment using nix-env --uninstall
and reattempt the Home Manager
generation switch.
Home Manager is only able to set session variables automatically if it manages your Bash or Z shell configuration. If you don't want to let Home Manager manage your shell then you will have to manually source the
~/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh
file in an appropriate way. In Bash and Z shell this can be done by adding
. "$HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/hm-session-vars.sh"
to your .profile
and .zshrc
files, respectively. The
hm-session-vars.sh
file should work in most Bourne-like shells.
A typical way to prepare a repository of configurations for multiple logins and machines is to prepare one "top-level" file for each unique combination.
For example, if you have two machines, called "kronos" and "rhea" on which you want to configure your user "jane" then you could create the files
kronos-jane.nix
,rhea-jane.nix
, andcommon.nix
in your repository. On the kronos and rhea machines you can then make
~jane/.config/nixpkgs/home.nix
be a symbolic link to the
corresponding file in your configuration repository.
The kronos-jane.nix
and rhea-jane.nix
files follow the format
{ ... }:
{
imports = [ ./common.nix ];
# Various options that are specific for this machine/user.
}
while the common.nix
file contains configuration shared across the
two logins. Of course, instead of just a single common.nix
file you
can have multiple ones, even one per program or service.
You can get some inspiration from the Post your home-manager home.nix file! Reddit thread.
You are most likely trying to configure the GTK or Gnome Terminal but the DBus session is not aware of the dconf service. The full error you might get is
error: GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.ServiceUnknown: The name ca.desrt.dconf was not provided by any .service files
The solution on NixOS is to add
services.dbus.packages = with pkgs; [ gnome3.dconf ];
to your system configuration.
If you are using a stable version of Nixpkgs but would like to install some particular packages from Nixpkgs unstable then you can import the unstable Nixpkgs and refer to its packages within your configuration. Something like
{ pkgs, config, ... }:
let
pkgsUnstable = import <nixpkgs-unstable> {};
in
{
home.packages = [
pkgsUnstable.foo
];
# …
}
should work provided you have a Nix channel called nixpkgs-unstable
.
Note, the package will not be affected by any package overrides,
overlays, etc.