| modules | ||
| nix | ||
| flake.lock | ||
| flake.nix | ||
| README.md | ||
| shell.qml | ||
nova-shell
A minimal Quickshell bar for niri, lovingly hallucinated by a statistical text blender. Every line of code in this repository was produced by a glorified autocomplete engine and has not been meaningfully reviewed by a human with a functioning brain.
Use at your own risk. The slop machine was very confident, which is exactly when you should be most suspicious.
"Features"
- Bar with workspaces, window title, clock, tray, and a regrettable number of widgets
- Niri IPC integration — workspace indicator, focused window title, power menu with
niri msg action quit - Context menus for tray icons with submenu support, because the robot watched celestia-shell do it and got jealous
- Per-module accent colors that change based on state (battery goes red when it's dying, bluetooth goes blue when connected, volume dims when muted — genuinely useful, by accident)
- OSD overlay for volume and brightness changes — works with niri hotkeys, not just the bar
- Screen corner rounding — tiny overlay windows that draw quarter-circle masks, configurable via
screenRadius(set to 0 if you prefer your corners sharp and your desktop ugly) - Weather via wttrbar with configurable arguments and rich HTML tooltips
- Power menu with lock, suspend, logout, reboot, shutdown
- Flyout tooltips that actually filter by screen on multi-monitor setups, which only took three attempts to get right
- Home Manager module with stylix integration, per-module enable/disable, and a theme system that hot-reloads
- treefmt + nixfmt for formatting, because even AI slop deserves consistent indentation
- Checks via
nix flake check(the irony of testing AI garbage is not lost on anyone)
Installation
Add the flake input and import the Home Manager module. The robot did not test any of this on real hardware, but it was extremely confident while writing it, which is the next best thing.
# flake.nix
inputs = {
nova-shell.url = "git+https://git.berlin.ccc.de/vinzenz/nova-shell";
nova-shell.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
};
# home.nix
imports = [ inputs.nova-shell.homeModules.default ];
Configuration
Turning it on
programs.nova-shell.enable = true;
This installs the bar, the Symbols Nerd Font, and a systemd user service that
starts with graphical-session.target. If you use
stylix, colors and fonts are populated
automatically — one fewer thing for the AI to have gotten wrong. If you do not
use stylix, you get Catppuccin Mocha, because the robot has taste and it is
purple.
Disabling modules
All modules are enabled by default, because the robot was optimistic about
what hardware you own and what software you run. Set any to false to make
them go away permanently, which will feel better than you expect.
Disabling weather also removes wttrbar from your packages, which is the
one piece of genuine dependency management in this entire project and
frankly more than it deserves.
programs.nova-shell.modules = {
weather.enable = false; # also evicts wttrbar from your system
bluetooth.enable = false; # for people whose computers have ethernet ports and opinions
backlight.enable = false; # your desktop monitor does not have a backlight slider, probably
battery.enable = false; # see above, but for power
temperature.enable = false; # what you don't measure can't alarm you
disk.enable = false; # the number will only make you anxious
power.enable = false; # if you enjoy living dangerously without a logout button
# modules with extra config
backlight.step = 2; # brightness adjustment %
weather.args = [ "--nerd" "--location" "Berlin" ]; # wttrbar arguments
};
Each module is an object with enable (default true) and optional extra
settings. Full list: workspaces, tray, windowTitle, clock,
notifications, mpris, volume, bluetooth, backlight, network,
powerProfile, idleInhibitor, weather, temperature, cpu, memory,
disk, battery, power.
Theme
Theme keys are merged on top of whatever stylix provides. You only need to
specify what you want to override. Values are written to
~/.config/nova-shell/theme.json, which the bar watches for changes at
runtime, so you can iterate on colors without restarting anything — a level
of polish that frankly raises uncomfortable questions about the rest of it.
programs.nova-shell.theme = {
barHeight = 28;
barOpacity = 0.85;
barPadding = 10;
barSpacing = 8;
radius = 6;
fontSize = 13;
fontFamily = "JetBrains Mono";
# override individual palette entries if stylix's choices personally offend you
colors.base00 = "#1a1a2e";
colors.base05 = "#e0e0f0";
};
Full list of theme keys and their defaults:
| Key | Default | Controls |
|---|---|---|
colors.base00–base0F |
Catppuccin Mocha | Base16 palette |
fontFamily |
"sans-serif" |
Bar text font |
iconFontFamily |
"Symbols Nerd Font" |
Nerd font for icons |
fontSize |
12 |
Base font size (px) |
barHeight |
32 |
Bar height (px) |
barOpacity |
0.9 |
Bar and flyout background opacity |
barPadding |
8 |
Left/right bar content margin (px) |
barSpacing |
12 |
Gap between modules (px) |
moduleSpacing |
4 |
Icon-to-label gap within a module (px) |
radius |
4 |
Corner radius for flyouts and menus (px) |
screenRadius |
15 |
Screen corner rounding, 0 to disable (px) |
Systemd service
Enabled by default, bound to graphical-session.target. To attach it to
something more specific, or to disable it entirely because you have strong
feelings about how your session starts:
programs.nova-shell.systemd = {
enable = true;
target = "niri.service";
};
Contributing
Sure, why not. It can't get much worse, and the GPL requires you to share your improvements anyway, so you might as well.
License
GPLv3. Yes, the AI slop is copylefted now. caelestia-dots/shell provided architectural inspiration, which the robot then faithfully mangled into this. If you improve it, the license requires you to share those improvements — a higher standard of accountability than the author has held themselves to.