On 2021-11-08 06:44, phodina wrote: > Hi Andrew, > > On Wednesday, November 3rd, 2021 at 8:24 AM, Andrew Tropin wrote: > >> On 2021-11-02 11:31, phodina@protonmail.com wrote: >> >> > Hi Andrew, >> > >> > Thanks for the development of Guix home. I've recently switch to it from my dotfiles. >> > >> > However, there is one thing that I do not know how to set. >> > >> > When using the service home-files-service-type I encountered a situation where I'm copying a script: >> > >> > (simple-service 'dotfiles >> > >> > home-files-service-type >> > >> > (list >> > >> > ... >> > >> > `("config/sway/wallpaper-change.sh" ,(local-file "config/sway/wallpaper-change.sh")))) >> > >> > However, after guix home reconfigure the file has only read flags set not execute. Even though the original file has execute flags. >> > >> > Is the home-files-service-type the correct service to use? >> > >> > Petr >> >> If there is no specific home service for your use case, which generates >> >> all necessary configs and executables for you the answer is probably >> >> yes, using home-files-service-type directly is a way to go. >> >> > Or do I have to patch it in order to keep the permissions? >> >> AFAIK, local-file, mixed-text-file create non-executable files in the >> >> store by design. > > Thanks, I've now looked more at the implementation and spend time understanding the differences between local-file, plain-file, computed-file, program-file. >> >> If you want to make an executable file you have at least a few options: >> >> 0. You can use recursive? flag to keep permissions. >> >> (local-file "blabla" #:recursive? #t) >> > > Nice and simple solution. > >> The quote from documentation: >> >> > if file designates a flat file and recursive? is true, its contents >> > >> > are added, and its permission bits are kept. >> >> http://guix.gnu.org/en/manual/devel/en/guix.html#index-local_002dfile >> >> 1. Use program-file >> >> http://guix.gnu.org/en/manual/devel/en/guix.html#index-program_002dfile >> >> For example I do it for generating screenshot scripts: >> >> https://git.sr.ht/~abcdw/rde/tree/master/item/rde/features/wm.scm#L188 > > Thanks for this example! This is what I've been looking for. > >> 2. Use computed-file, which will call chmod with apropriate arguments >> >> inside gexp. Take a look at "empty-tree" example in the manual, you can >> >> create a file and set apropriate permissions in the same way. >> >> -- > > This is also super useful as it allows to do what's needed to the file. > >> >> Best regards, >> >> Andrew Tropin Sure, glad to help :) -- Best regards, Andrew Tropin