f3a114e088
environment.sessionVariables cannot refer to the values of env vars, and as a result this has caused problems in a variety of scenarios. One use for these is that they're injected into /etc/profile, elewhere these are used to populate an 'envfile' for pam (`pam 5 pam_env.conf`) which mentions use of HOME being potentially problematic. Anyway if the goal is to make things easier for users, simply do the NIX_PATH modification as extraInit. This fixes the annoying problems generated by the current approach (#40165 and others) while hopefully serving the original goal. One way to check if things are borked is to try: $ sudo env | grep NIX_PATH Which (before this change) prints NIX_PATH variable with an unexpanded $HOME in the value. ------- This does mean the following won't contain user channels for 'will': $ sudo -u will nix-instantiate --eval -E builtins.nixPath However AFAICT currently they won't be present either, due to unescaped $HOME. Unsure if similar situation for other users of sessionVariables (not sudo) work with current situation (if they exist they will regress after this change AFAIK). |
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doc | ||
lib | ||
maintainers | ||
modules | ||
tests | ||
COPYING | ||
default.nix | ||
README | ||
release-combined.nix | ||
release-small.nix | ||
release.nix |
*** NixOS *** NixOS is a Linux distribution based on the purely functional package management system Nix. More information can be found at http://nixos.org/nixos and in the manual in doc/manual.