Wrappers vs. Dotfiles
From NixOS Wiki
Usually user applications (like editors, etc.) get configured through dotfiles in the user's home directory. An alternative, declarative approach is to create wrappers for application on a per-user basis, like this:
{
users.users.root.packages = [
(pkgs.writeScriptBin "htop" ''
#! ${pkgs.bash}/bin/bash
export HTOPRC=${pkgs.writeText "htoprc" ...}
exec ${pkgs.htop}/bin/htop "$@"
'')
];
}
The disadvantage of this way is that it doesn't propagate man pages and other paths from the old derivation. Please refer to Nix_Cookbook#Wrapping_packages to possible solutions to retain all outputs.
You can use this simple function which takes care of wrapping the script & symlinking
writeShellScriptBinAndSymlink = name: text: super.symlinkJoin {
name = name;
paths = [
super."${name}"
(super.writeShellScriptBin name text)
];
};
Downside of the Wrapper Approach
- There might be applications that don't provide means to specify configuration. One could override
$HOME
, but then there might be applications that require$HOME
for other stuff than configuration. - Applications cannot write their configuration anymore, e.g.
htop
will just terminate without error and nothing changed.
Alternatives
- Home Manager manages dotfiles in the user's home directory