Emacs
Emacs
is an extensible, customizable, self-documenting real-time display
editor — and more. At its core is an interpreter for Emacs Lisp, a
dialect of the Lisp programming language with extensions to
support text editing.
Emacs runs within a graphical desktop environment using the X
Window System, but works equally well on a text terminal. Under
OS X, a "Mac port" edition is
available, which uses Apple's native GUI frameworks.
Nixpkgs provides a superior environment
for running Emacs. It's simple to
create custom builds by overriding the default packages. Chaotic
collections of Emacs Lisp code and extensions can be brought under
control using declarative package
management. NixOS even provides a
systemd user service for automatically
starting the Emacs daemon.
Installing Emacs
Emacs can be installed in the normal way for Nix (see
).
In addition, a NixOS service
can be enabled.
The Different Releases of EmacsNixpkgs defines several basic Emacs
packages. The following are attributes belonging to the
pkgs set:
emacsemacs25
The latest stable version of Emacs 25 using the GTK+ 2 widget
toolkit.
emacs25-nox
Emacs 25 built without any dependency on X11
libraries.
emacsMacportemacs25Macport
Emacs 25 with the "Mac port" patches, providing a more
native look and feel under OS X.
If those aren't suitable, then the following imitation Emacs
editors are also available in Nixpkgs:
Zile,
mg,
Yi.
Adding Packages to Emacs
Emacs includes an entire ecosystem of functionality beyond
text editing, including a project planner, mail and news
reader, debugger interface, calendar, and more.
Most extensions are gotten with the Emacs packaging system
(package.el) from Emacs Lisp Package Archive
(ELPA),
MELPA,
MELPA Stable,
and Org ELPA.
Nixpkgs is regularly updated to mirror all these archives.
Under NixOS, you can continue to use
package-list-packages and
package-install to install packages. You
can also declare the set of Emacs packages you need using the
derivations from Nixpkgs. The rest of this section discusses
declarative installation of Emacs packages through nixpkgs.
This documentation describes the new Emacs packages
framework in NixOS 16.03
(emacsPackagesNg) which should not be
confused with the previous and deprecated framework
(emacs24Packages).
The first step to declare the list of packages you want in
your Emacs installation is to create a dedicated
derivation. This can be done in a dedicated
emacs.nix file such as:
Nix expression to build Emacs with packages (emacs.nix)
/*
This is a nix expression to build Emacs and some Emacs packages I like
from source on any distribution where Nix is installed. This will install
all the dependencies from the nixpkgs repository and build the binary files
without interfering with the host distribution.
To build the project, type the following from the current directory:
$ nix-build emacs.nix
To run the newly compiled executable:
$ ./result/bin/emacs
*/
{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
let
myEmacs = pkgs.emacs;
emacsWithPackages = (pkgs.emacsPackagesNgGen myEmacs).emacsWithPackages;
in
emacsWithPackages (epkgs: (with epkgs.melpaStablePackages; [
magit # ; Integrate git <C-x g>
zerodark-theme # ; Nicolas' theme
]) ++ (with epkgs.melpaPackages; [
undo-tree # ; <C-x u> to show the undo tree
zoom-frm # ; increase/decrease font size for all buffers %lt;C-x C-+>
]) ++ (with epkgs.elpaPackages; [
auctex # ; LaTeX mode
beacon # ; highlight my cursor when scrolling
nameless # ; hide current package name everywhere in elisp code
]) ++ [
pkgs.notmuch # From main packages set
])
The first non-comment line in this file
({ pkgs ? ... })
indicates that the whole file represents a function.
The let expression below defines a
myEmacs binding pointing to the current
stable version of Emacs. This binding is here to separate the
choice of the Emacs binary from the specification of the
required packages.
This generates an emacsWithPackages
function. It takes a single argument: a function from a
package set to a list of packages (the packages that will
be available in Emacs).
The rest of the file specifies the list of packages to
install. In the example, two packages
(magit and
zerodark-theme) are taken from MELPA
stable.
Two packages (undo-tree and
zoom-frm) are taken from MELPA.
Three packages are taken from GNU ELPA.notmuch is taken from a nixpkgs derivation
which contains an Emacs mode.
The result of this configuration will be an
emacs command which launches Emacs with all
of your chosen packages in the load-path.
You can check that it works by executing this in a terminal:
$ nix-build emacs.nix
$ ./result/bin/emacs -q
and then typing M-x package-initialize.
Check that you can use all the packages you want in this
Emacs instance. For example, try switching to the zerodark
theme through
M-x load-theme <RET> zerodark <RET> y.
A few popular extensions worth checking out are: auctex,
company, edit-server, flycheck, helm, iedit, magit,
multiple-cursors, projectile, and yasnippet.
The list of available packages in the various ELPA
repositories can be seen with the following commands:
Querying Emacs packages" -qaP -A emacsPackagesNg.elpaPackages
nix-env -f "" -qaP -A emacsPackagesNg.melpaPackages
nix-env -f "" -qaP -A emacsPackagesNg.melpaStablePackages
nix-env -f "" -qaP -A emacsPackagesNg.orgPackages
]]>
If you are on NixOS, you can install this particular Emacs for
all users by adding it to the list of system packages
(see ). Simply
modify your file configuration.nix to
make it contain:
Custom Emacs in configuration.nix
In this case, the next nixos-rebuild switch
will take care of adding your emacs to the
PATH environment variable
(see ).
If you are not on NixOS or want to install this particular
Emacs only for yourself, you can do so by adding it to your
~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix
(see Nixpkgs manual):
Custom Emacs in ~/.config/nixpkgs/config.nix
In this case, the next
nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -iA myemacs
will take care of adding your emacs to the
PATH environment variable.
Advanced Emacs Configuration
If you want, you can tweak the Emacs package itself from your
emacs.nix. For example, if you want to
have a GTK+3-based Emacs instead of the default GTK+2-based
binary and remove the automatically generated
emacs.desktop (useful is you only use
emacsclient), you can change your file
emacs.nix in this way:
Custom Emacs build {} }:
let
myEmacs = (pkgs.emacs.override {
# Use gtk3 instead of the default gtk2
withGTK3 = true;
withGTK2 = false;
}).overrideAttrs (attrs: {
# I don't want emacs.desktop file because I only use
# emacsclient.
postInstall = (attrs.postInstall or "") + ''
rm $out/share/applications/emacs.desktop
'';
});
in [...]
]]>
After building this file as shown in ,
you will get an GTK3-based Emacs binary pre-loaded with your
favorite packages.
Running Emacs as a ServiceNixOS provides an optional
systemd service which launches
Emacs daemon
with the user's login session.
Source:modules/services/editors/emacs.nixEnabling the Service
To install and enable the systemd
user service for Emacs daemon, add the following to your
configuration.nix:
The services.emacs.package option allows a
custom derivation to be used, for example, one created by
emacsWithPackages.
Ensure that the Emacs server is enabled for your user's Emacs
configuration, either by customizing the
server-mode variable, or by adding
(server-start) to
~/.emacs.d/init.el.
To start the daemon, execute the following:
$ nixos-rebuild switch # to activate the new configuration.nix
$ systemctl --user daemon-reload # to force systemd reload
$ systemctl --user start emacs.service # to start the Emacs daemon
The server should now be ready to serve Emacs clients.
Starting the client
Ensure that the emacs server is enabled, either by customizing
the server-mode variable, or by adding
(server-start) to
~/.emacs.
To connect to the emacs daemon, run one of the following:
Configuring the EDITOR variable
If services.emacs.defaultEditor is
true, the EDITOR variable
will be set to a wrapper script which launches
emacsclient.
Any setting of EDITOR in the shell config
files will override
services.emacs.defaultEditor.
To make sure EDITOR refers to the Emacs
wrapper script, remove any existing EDITOR
assignment from .profile,
.bashrc, .zshenv or
any other shell config file.
If you have formed certain bad habits when editing files,
these can be corrected with a shell alias to the wrapper
script:
alias vi=$EDITORPer-User Enabling of the Service
In general, systemd user services
are globally enabled by symlinks in
/etc/systemd/user. In the case where
Emacs daemon is not wanted for all users, it is possible to
install the service but not globally enable it:
To enable the systemd user service for just
the currently logged in user, run:
systemctl --user enable emacs
This will add the symlink
~/.config/systemd/user/emacs.service.
Configuring Emacs
The Emacs init file should be changed to load the extension
packages at startup:
Package initialization in .emacs
After the declarative emacs package configuration has been
tested, previously downloaded packages can be cleaned up by
removing ~/.emacs.d/elpa (do make a backup
first, in case you forgot a package).
A Major Mode for Nix Expressions
Of interest may be melpaPackages.nix-mode,
which provides syntax highlighting for the Nix language. This is
particularly convenient if you regularly edit Nix files.
Accessing man pages
You can use woman to get completion of all
available man pages. For example, type M-x woman
<RET> nixos-rebuild <RET>.Editing DocBook 5 XML Documents
Emacs includes nXML,
a major-mode for validating and editing XML documents.
When editing DocBook 5.0 documents, such as
this one,
nXML needs to be configured with the relevant schema, which is
not included.
To install the DocBook 5.0 schemas, either add
pkgs.docbook5 to
environment.systemPackages (NixOS), or run
nix-env -i pkgs.docbook5
(Nix).
Then customize the variable rng-schema-locating-files to include ~/.emacs.d/schemas.xml and put the following text into that file:
nXML Schema Configuration (~/.emacs.d/schemas.xml)
]]>