nixpkgs-config
asdf-nodejs
nixpkgs-config | asdf-nodejs | |
---|---|---|
15 | 27 | |
139 | 852 | |
- | 0.9% | |
6.2 | 5.6 | |
4 months ago | 3 months ago | |
Nix | Shell | |
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
nixpkgs-config
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Diving straight into flakes with no channels?
You can also take a look at my server configuration which uses flakes. And my separately-managed home-manager configuration which also uses flakes
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So I’m hooked on this declarative configuration business. How deep does the rabbit hole go? Can I “rice” my desktop with just one file?
My "rice": https://github.com/jonringer/nixpkgs-config
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libstdc++.so.6 => not found
I configure my neovim through home-manager. My configuration. Pulling vimPlugins from nixpkgs should give you something which works with NixOS (or anywhere for that matter, NixOS is essentially a clean room).
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A Cross-Platform tool to deploy dot files
My dot file repo.
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Using NixOS and Arch on separate machines
Home-manager link My example setup
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Neovim unstable
Reference: - home.nix entry - Which refers to it's own dedicated file
- should i move all my pkgs from configuration.nix and move to home manager?
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Installing every Arch package
If you want to take nix for a spin, i would recommend trying home-manager. It's essentially NixOS, but for dot files. It can install packages and services in addition to manage configuration. Also, I've been able to get it work on NixOS, WSL2, ubuntu, and macOS. Personal configuration if you're curious how it would look.
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The Curse of NixOS
> And about Home Manager, the reason why I think it's over-hyped is because it provides a declarative approach to something that was... already declarative. Your $XDG_CONFIG directory does not need a leaky Nix abstraction on top of it
I don't really agree, I spent about 30mins to get my home-manager config to support an m1 mac [0]. I don't really want to think how long it would take me to look up all of the homebrew package names, and learn a new package manager. Instead, I just pushed all of the linux-specific items into their own bin, a little more logic, and I was able to get back to a comfortable terminal + git + vim settings.
Also, nix exposes congruent configuration management[1]. The state of my system is an exact reflection of the configuration. With other tools like ansible, vagrant, etc, I would get reconciliation configuration which is close on initial install but configuration drift is an ever-present concern; not to mention that large recipes and playbooks can take a very long time to run. Going the homebrew route would be divergent configuration, it would be very hard for me to get back to a certain configuration. With nix (and by extension home-manager), I can version control the configuration, improve it, roll it back, w/e I want.
> Why would I write my i3 config in Nix??
You do get some type checking, although the iteration time would probably be similar. You could also just do `xsession.windowManager.i3.extraConfig = builtins.readFile ./i3.config;` if you really just wanted to wholesale read in your existing profile.
> I'd rather just use `nix-env` personally.
nix-env is a double edge sword. You can rollback (somewhat, I believe it's just a stack of all changes), which is an improvement. However, nix only retains the "derivation name" to try and management. But for packages like python38, if you try to upgrade it, it will determine that `python-3.11-a3` is the package which is the most up-to-date. I try to discourage using nix-env.
[0]: https://github.com/jonringer/nixpkgs-config/commit/37ddfefa1...
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Where are alacritty and systemd specified to install?
Here and full config here
asdf-nodejs
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Installing Erlang With VFOX
I have used a similar tool asdf before, but the previous experience of using asdf was not very good (I don’t mean to step on it~, the ASDF ecosystem is very strong), vfox now supports a lot of plugins, and can already manage the versions of most common mainstream languages.
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Show HN: Flox 1.0 – Open-source dev env as code with Nix
Not nix based, but I really like https://github.com/jdx/mise too to manage dev tools.
It’s a modern version of https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf written in Rust.
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Elixir for Cynical Curmudgeons
That's what I would suggest as well. WSL2 and use asdf[1] to manage the erlang/elixir versions.
[1]: https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf
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Configuração do Windows para desenvolvimento
echo "Installing nodejs with asdf" asdf plugin add nodejs https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf-nodejs.git asdf install nodejs latest asdf global nodejs latest
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Update Go version from CLI
However this is still a neat script OP! I was looking for something like this when installing Go for the first time and was contemplating between goenv, gvm, and asdf before settling on brew.
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Development Containers
Have you tried this? https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf-nodejs#nvmrc-and-node-versio...
Also lts, lts-hydrogen, etc are available to install I can see when running `asdf list all nodejs`
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fnm: 🚀 Fast and simple Node.js version manager, built in Rust
How does this compare to nvm or asdf?
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M1 keeps changing Ruby 2.5.1 to 3.0
I'm not too familiar with installing Ruby on Mac, but you could try using a ruby version manager (like rbenv or asdf).
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ASDF: Automatic Management of Multiple Versions
For more information, or if you need help on this awesome tool, don’t hesitate to head over to asdf-vm.com. Also, feel free to star the GitHub Repository of asdf to support the team behind this project. 😉
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[Ubuntu] How to install a newer version of Node than the one provided by apt?
nvm was adding a huge delay to my shell startup and starting node. There are faster ones out there like n https://github.com/tj/n or fnm https://github.com/Schniz/fnm I use fnm there are also similar tools that work with multiple languages like asdf https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf
What are some alternatives?
base16-nix - Home manager module for themeing programs with base16 templates
SDKMan - The SDKMAN! Command Line Interface
eww - ElKowars wacky widgets
nodenv - Manage multiple NodeJS versions.
nix-prisma-example - An example Prisma project using nix
volta - Volta: JS Toolchains as Code. ⚡
nix-config - Personal NixOS configuration
asdf-postgres - asdf plugin for Postgres
nixos-beginners-handbook - The missing handbook for NixOS beginners
n-install - Installs n, the Node.js version manager, without needing to install Node.js first: curl -L https://bit.ly/n-install | bash
wallpaper-generator - Generate wallpaper images from mathematical functions
asdf - Extendable version manager with support for Ruby, Node.js, Elixir, Erlang & more