Keyboard Layout Customization: Difference between revisions
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services.xserver.displayManager.sessionCommands = "sleep 5 && ${pkgs.xorg.xmodmap}/bin/xmodmap -e 'keycode 43 = h H Left H' &"; | services.xserver.displayManager.sessionCommands = "sleep 5 && ${pkgs.xorg.xmodmap}/bin/xmodmap -e 'keycode 43 = h H Left H' &"; | ||
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[[Category:Hardware]] |
Revision as of 20:03, 24 April 2024
20.09 and later
In 20.09 there's services.xserver.extraLayouts for this.
Using xkbcomp
Simple
The easiest way to customize your keyboard layout on NixOS is with these options:
services.xserver.layout
: Keyboard layout, or multiple keyboard layouts separated by commas.services.xserver.xkbVariant
: X keyboard variant or multiple variants separated by commas (a variant can be empty).services.xserver.xkbModel
: Keyboard model.services.xserver.xkbOptions
: X keyboard options; layout switching goes here.
Example:
For desktop:
services.xserver = {
layout = "us,ru";
xkbVariant = "workman,";
xkbOptions = "grp:win_space_toggle";
};
For console:
console.keyMap = "us";
You can find valid values for these options in $(nix-build --no-out-link '<nixpkgs>' -A xkeyboard_config)/etc/X11/xkb/rules/base.lst
Advanced
If the above options aren't enough, you can instead create your own keyboard layout by going through xkb. To get started, install xorg.xkbcomp
and run setxkbmap -print > layout.xkb
to get an initial file. This corresponds to your current layout. Use xkbcomp layout.xkb $DISPLAY
to load the file as your new layout. Refer to https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/X_KeyBoard_extension on how to edit this file.
Lots of examples can be found in $(nix-build --no-out-link '<nixpkgs>' -A xorg.xkeyboardconfig)/etc/X11/xkb/
. For available key symbols, see $(nix-build --no-out-link '<nixpkgs>' -A xorg.xproto)/include/X11/keysymdef.h
.
To load this file at the start of the X session, add the following to your configuration.nix
. The extra compilation step (xkbcomp
) helps catching layout errors at build time.
let
compiledLayout = pkgs.runCommand "keyboard-layout" {} ''
${pkgs.xorg.xkbcomp}/bin/xkbcomp ${./path/to/layout.xkb} $out
'';
in
services.xserver.displayManager.sessionCommands = "${pkgs.xorg.xkbcomp}/bin/xkbcomp ${compiledLayout} $DISPLAY";
If you are using home-manager, you also need to prevent home-manager from managing the keyboard by having home.keyboard = null;
in your home-manager configuration.
Relevant other options
services.xserver.exportConfiguration
: Makes it so the above mentioned xkb directory (and thexorg.conf
file) gets exported to/etc/X11/xkb
, which is useful if you have to often look stuff up in it.services.xserver.xkbDir
: Allows you to set a different xkb directory altogether. All the above mentioned things will use this instead of the default one in regards to xkb stuff.console.useXkbConfig
: Makes it so the tty console has about the same layout as the one configured in theservices.xserver
options.
Configs
Advanced configuration with xmodmap
Some users have found xmodmap to be a helpful tool although reports of successful implementation are varied.
cat /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
services.xserver.displayManager.sessionCommands =
${pkgs.xorg.xmodmap}/bin/xmodmap "${pkgs.writeText "xkb-layout" ''
! Map umlauts to RIGHT ALT + <key>
keycode 108 = Mode_switch
keysym e = e E EuroSign
keysym c = c C cent
keysym a = a A adiaeresis Adiaeresis
keysym o = o O odiaeresis Odiaeresis
keysym u = u U udiaeresis Udiaeresis
keysym s = s S ssharp
! disable capslock
! remove Lock = Caps_Lock
''}"
Works after boot and after suspend/resume.
You may need to add some delay to make xmodmap command work.
services.xserver.displayManager.sessionCommands = "sleep 5 && ${pkgs.xorg.xmodmap}/bin/xmodmap -e 'keycode 43 = h H Left H' &";