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xf86-video-intel is now incompatible with the latest Mesa: it may fix screen tearing, but this is not really worth the other downsides, so we should stop recommending it. We recommend `modesetting` unless the GPU is so old to be unsupported, and mention picom is screen tearing is too bad. Hopefully the next Xorg release will fix this.
344 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
344 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
# X Window System {#sec-x11}
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The X Window System (X11) provides the basis of NixOS' graphical user
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interface. It can be enabled as follows:
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.enable = true;
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}
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```
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The X server will automatically detect and use the appropriate video
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driver from a set of X.org drivers (such as `vesa` and `intel`). You can
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also specify a driver manually, e.g.
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "r128" ];
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}
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```
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to enable X.org's `xf86-video-r128` driver.
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You also need to enable at least one desktop or window manager.
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Otherwise, you can only log into a plain undecorated `xterm` window.
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Thus you should pick one or more of the following lines:
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.desktopManager.plasma5.enable = true;
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services.xserver.desktopManager.xfce.enable = true;
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services.xserver.desktopManager.gnome.enable = true;
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services.xserver.desktopManager.mate.enable = true;
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services.xserver.windowManager.xmonad.enable = true;
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services.xserver.windowManager.twm.enable = true;
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services.xserver.windowManager.icewm.enable = true;
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services.xserver.windowManager.i3.enable = true;
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services.xserver.windowManager.herbstluftwm.enable = true;
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}
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```
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NixOS's default *display manager* (the program that provides a graphical
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login prompt and manages the X server) is LightDM. You can select an
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alternative one by picking one of the following lines:
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```nix
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{
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services.displayManager.sddm.enable = true;
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services.xserver.displayManager.gdm.enable = true;
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}
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```
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You can set the keyboard layout (and optionally the layout variant):
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.xkb.layout = "de";
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services.xserver.xkb.variant = "neo";
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}
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```
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The X server is started automatically at boot time. If you don't want
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this to happen, you can set:
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.autorun = false;
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}
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```
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The X server can then be started manually:
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```ShellSession
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# systemctl start display-manager.service
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```
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On 64-bit systems, if you want OpenGL for 32-bit programs such as in
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Wine, you should also set the following:
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```nix
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{
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hardware.graphics.enable32Bit = true;
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}
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```
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## Auto-login {#sec-x11-auto-login}
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The x11 login screen can be skipped entirely, automatically logging you
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into your window manager and desktop environment when you boot your
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computer.
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This is especially helpful if you have disk encryption enabled. Since
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you already have to provide a password to decrypt your disk, entering a
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second password to login can be redundant.
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To enable auto-login, you need to define your default window manager and
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desktop environment. If you wanted no desktop environment and i3 as your
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your window manager, you'd define:
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```nix
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{
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services.displayManager.defaultSession = "none+i3";
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}
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```
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Every display manager in NixOS supports auto-login, here is an example
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using lightdm for a user `alice`:
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.displayManager.lightdm.enable = true;
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services.displayManager.autoLogin.enable = true;
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services.displayManager.autoLogin.user = "alice";
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}
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```
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## Intel Graphics drivers {#sec-x11--graphics-cards-intel}
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The default and recommended driver for Intel Graphics in X.org is `modesetting`
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(included in the xorg-server package itself).
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This is a generic driver which uses the kernel [mode
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setting](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mode_setting) (KMS) mechanism, it
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supports Glamor (2D graphics acceleration via OpenGL) and is actively
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maintained, it may perform worse in some cases (like in old chipsets).
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::: {.note}
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The `modesetting` driver doesn't currently provide a `TearFree` option (this
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will become available in an upcoming X.org release), So, without using a
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compositor (for example, see [](#opt-services.picom.enable)) you will
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experience screen tearing.
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:::
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There also used to be a second driver, `intel` (provided by the
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xf86-video-intel package), specific to older Intel iGPUs from generation 2 to
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9.
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This driver hasn't been maintained in years and was removed in NixOS 24.11
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after it stopped working. If you chipset is too old to be supported by
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`modesetting` and have no other choice you may try an unsupported NixOS version
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(reportedly working up to NixOS 24.05) and set
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "intel" ];
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}
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```
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## Proprietary NVIDIA drivers {#sec-x11-graphics-cards-nvidia}
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NVIDIA provides a proprietary driver for its graphics cards that has
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better 3D performance than the X.org drivers. It is not enabled by
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default because it's not free software. You can enable it as follows:
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.videoDrivers = [ "nvidia" ];
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}
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```
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If you have an older card, you may have to use one of the legacy drivers:
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```nix
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{
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hardware.nvidia.package = config.boot.kernelPackages.nvidiaPackages.legacy_470;
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hardware.nvidia.package = config.boot.kernelPackages.nvidiaPackages.legacy_390;
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hardware.nvidia.package = config.boot.kernelPackages.nvidiaPackages.legacy_340;
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}
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```
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You may need to reboot after enabling this driver to prevent a clash
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with other kernel modules.
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## Touchpads {#sec-x11-touchpads}
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Support for Synaptics touchpads (found in many laptops such as the Dell
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Latitude series) can be enabled as follows:
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```nix
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{
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services.libinput.enable = true;
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}
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```
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The driver has many options (see [](#ch-options)).
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For instance, the following disables tap-to-click behavior:
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```nix
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{
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services.libinput.touchpad.tapping = false;
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}
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```
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Note: the use of `services.xserver.synaptics` is deprecated since NixOS
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17.09.
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## GTK/Qt themes {#sec-x11-gtk-and-qt-themes}
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GTK themes can be installed either to user profile or system-wide (via
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`environment.systemPackages`). To make Qt 5 applications look similar to
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GTK ones, you can use the following configuration:
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```nix
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{
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qt.enable = true;
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qt.platformTheme = "gtk2";
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qt.style = "gtk2";
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}
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```
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## Custom XKB layouts {#custom-xkb-layouts}
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It is possible to install custom [ XKB
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](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X_keyboard_extension) keyboard layouts
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using the option `services.xserver.xkb.extraLayouts`.
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As a first example, we are going to create a layout based on the basic
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US layout, with an additional layer to type some greek symbols by
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pressing the right-alt key.
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Create a file called `us-greek` with the following content (under a
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directory called `symbols`; it's an XKB peculiarity that will help with
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testing):
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```
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xkb_symbols "us-greek"
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{
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include "us(basic)" // includes the base US keys
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include "level3(ralt_switch)" // configures right alt as a third level switch
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key <LatA> { [ a, A, Greek_alpha ] };
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key <LatB> { [ b, B, Greek_beta ] };
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key <LatG> { [ g, G, Greek_gamma ] };
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key <LatD> { [ d, D, Greek_delta ] };
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key <LatZ> { [ z, Z, Greek_zeta ] };
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};
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```
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A minimal layout specification must include the following:
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.xkb.extraLayouts.us-greek = {
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description = "US layout with alt-gr greek";
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languages = [ "eng" ];
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symbolsFile = /yourpath/symbols/us-greek;
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};
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}
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```
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::: {.note}
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The name (after `extraLayouts.`) should match the one given to the
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`xkb_symbols` block.
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:::
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Applying this customization requires rebuilding several packages, and a
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broken XKB file can lead to the X session crashing at login. Therefore,
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you're strongly advised to **test your layout before applying it**:
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```ShellSession
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$ nix-shell -p xorg.xkbcomp
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$ setxkbmap -I/yourpath us-greek -print | xkbcomp -I/yourpath - $DISPLAY
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```
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You can inspect the predefined XKB files for examples:
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```ShellSession
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$ echo "$(nix-build --no-out-link '<nixpkgs>' -A xorg.xkeyboardconfig)/etc/X11/xkb/"
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```
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Once the configuration is applied, and you did a logout/login cycle, the
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layout should be ready to use. You can try it by e.g. running
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`setxkbmap us-greek` and then type `<alt>+a` (it may not get applied in
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your terminal straight away). To change the default, the usual
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`services.xserver.xkb.layout` option can still be used.
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A layout can have several other components besides `xkb_symbols`, for
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example we will define new keycodes for some multimedia key and bind
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these to some symbol.
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Use the *xev* utility from `pkgs.xorg.xev` to find the codes of the keys
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of interest, then create a `media-key` file to hold the keycodes
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definitions
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```
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xkb_keycodes "media"
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{
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<volUp> = 123;
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<volDown> = 456;
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}
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```
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Now use the newly define keycodes in `media-sym`:
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```
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xkb_symbols "media"
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{
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key.type = "ONE_LEVEL";
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key <volUp> { [ XF86AudioLowerVolume ] };
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key <volDown> { [ XF86AudioRaiseVolume ] };
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}
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```
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As before, to install the layout do
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.xkb.extraLayouts.media = {
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description = "Multimedia keys remapping";
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languages = [ "eng" ];
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symbolsFile = /path/to/media-key;
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keycodesFile = /path/to/media-sym;
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};
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}
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```
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::: {.note}
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The function `pkgs.writeText <filename> <content>` can be useful if you
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prefer to keep the layout definitions inside the NixOS configuration.
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:::
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Unfortunately, the Xorg server does not (currently) support setting a
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keymap directly but relies instead on XKB rules to select the matching
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components (keycodes, types, ...) of a layout. This means that
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components other than symbols won't be loaded by default. As a
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workaround, you can set the keymap using `setxkbmap` at the start of the
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session with:
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```nix
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{
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services.xserver.displayManager.sessionCommands = "setxkbmap -keycodes media";
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}
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```
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If you are manually starting the X server, you should set the argument
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`-xkbdir /etc/X11/xkb`, otherwise X won't find your layout files. For
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example with `xinit` run
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```ShellSession
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$ xinit -- -xkbdir /etc/X11/xkb
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```
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To learn how to write layouts take a look at the XKB [documentation
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](https://www.x.org/releases/current/doc/xorg-docs/input/XKB-Enhancing.html#Defining_New_Layouts).
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More example layouts can also be found [here
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](https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/X_KeyBoard_extension#Basic_examples).
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