# Edit this configuration file to define what should be installed on # your system. Help is available in the configuration.nix(5) man page, on # https://search.nixos.org/options and in the NixOS manual (`nixos-help`). { config, lib, pkgs, callPackage, ... }: { imports = [ ./hardware-configuration.nix ]; # Use the systemd-boot EFI boot loader. boot.loader.systemd-boot.enable = true; boot.loader.efi.canTouchEfiVariables = true; networking.hostName = "hp-laptop-lho"; # Define your hostname. networking.networkmanager.enable = true; # Easiest to use and most distros use this by default. # Set your time zone. time.timeZone = "Europe/Zurich"; console = { useXkbConfig = true; # use xkb.options in tty. }; environment.pathsToLink = ["/libexec"]; # Enable the X11 windowing system services.xserver = { enable = true; desktopManager = { xterm.enable = false; }; windowManager.i3 = { enable = true; extraPackages = with pkgs; [ rofi polybar dunst ]; }; }; # Configure keymap in X11 services.xserver.xkb.layout = "ch"; services.displayManager.defaultSession = "none+i3"; # services.xserver.xkb.options = "eurosign:e,caps:escape"; # Enable CUPS to print documents. # services.printing.enable = true; # Enable sound. hardware.pulseaudio.enable = true; # OR # services.pipewire = { # enable = true; # pulse.enable = true; # }; # Enable touchpad support (enabled default in most desktopManager). # services.libinput.enable = true; # Define a user account. Don't forget to set a password with ‘passwd’. programs.zsh.enable = true; hardware.bluetooth.enable = true; # enables support for Bluetooth hardware.bluetooth.powerOnBoot = true; # powers up the default Bluetooth controller on boot services.blueman.enable = true; services.libinput.touchpad.naturalScrolling = true; services.auto-cpufreq.enable = true; users.users.lorenz = { shell = pkgs.zsh; isNormalUser = true; extraGroups = [ "wheel" ]; # Enable ‘sudo’ for the user. }; fonts.packages = with pkgs; [ nerdfonts # font ]; # List packages installed in system profile. To search, run: # $ nix search wget environment.systemPackages = with pkgs; [ neovim wget neofetch git gcc nodejs_22 ]; # Some programs need SUID wrappers, can be configured further or are # started in user sessions. # programs.mtr.enable = true; # programs.gnupg.agent = { # enable = true; # enableSSHSupport = true; # }; # List services that you want to enable: # Enable the OpenSSH daemon. services.openssh.enable = true; # Open ports in the firewall. # networking.firewall.allowedTCPPorts = [ ... ]; # networking.firewall.allowedUDPPorts = [ ... ]; # Or disable the firewall altogether. # networking.firewall.enable = false; # Copy the NixOS configuration file and link it from the resulting system # (/run/current-system/configuration.nix). This is useful in case you # accidentally delete configuration.nix. # system.copySystemConfiguration = true; # This option defines the first version of NixOS you have installed on this particular machine, # and is used to maintain compatibility with application data (e.g. databases) created on older NixOS versions. # # Most users should NEVER change this value after the initial install, for any reason, # even if you've upgraded your system to a new NixOS release. # # This value does NOT affect the Nixpkgs version your packages and OS are pulled from, # so changing it will NOT upgrade your system - see https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/#sec-upgrading for how # to actually do that. # # This value being lower than the current NixOS release does NOT mean your system is # out of date, out of support, or vulnerable. # # Do NOT change this value unless you have manually inspected all the changes it would make to your configuration, # and migrated your data accordingly. # # For more information, see `man configuration.nix` or https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/options#opt-system.stateVersion . system.stateVersion = "24.11"; # Did you read the comment? nix.settings.experimental-features = [ "nix-command" "flakes" ]; }