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NixOS
For each host (server, laptop, etc.), there is a subdirectory inside hosts.
NixOS installation
For beginners, NixOS can be installed with a graphical installer.
Getting the ISO:
- There is no official torrent as they are not needed due to CDN.
- ISO and checksum are available here: https://nixos.org/download#nixos-iso
- There are unofficial torrents. If the checksum is compared with the one from the official website, these can be used as well: https://github.com/AnimMouse/NixOS-ISO-Torrents/releases
During installation:
- If the installation target is a SSD
- Trim the whole disk to mark all cells as unused and restore its initial performance
sudo blkdiscard -f /dev/nvmeXXX
- Select manual partitioning:
- One 512MB (or larger) Fat32 partition, mounted at
/boot
, "boot" flag enabled - Another partition (e.g. BTRFS) covering the rest of the drive, mounted at
/
, encryption enabled
- One 512MB (or larger) Fat32 partition, mounted at
Update, build and switch
Update
- Updating NixOS. https://superuser.com/a/1604695
Update channel and configuration:
sudo nix-channel --update && niv update
To apply the updates, continue with "Build and switch".
Build and switch: Using Colmena
See section "Colmena: Deployment and secret management" to build and apply updates.
Build and switch: Manually
- https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Nixos-rebuild
- https://discourse.nixos.org/t/how-to-get-this-pending-updates-notification-in-gnome/16344/3
- https://discourse.nixos.org/t/how-to-get-this-pending-updates-notification-in-gnome/16344/6
Option I: Build new config and activate it:
sudo nixos-rebuild -I nixos-config=hosts/$(hostname)/configuration.nix switch
To view changes, see section "Compare two versions of NixOS system profile".
Option II: Build new config and activate it during next boot:
sudo nixos-rebuild -I nixos-config=hosts/$(hostname)/configuration.nix boot
Option III: Build config and view changes:
# This leaves a symlink named `result` in the current directory.
sudo nixos-rebuild -I nixos-config=hosts/$(hostname)/configuration.nix build
nix --extra-experimental-features nix-command store diff-closures /run/current-system ./result
#=> ...
#=> linux: 6.1.47, 6.1.47-modules → 6.1.51, 6.1.51-modules, -11.8 KiB
Depending on if there are large kernel changes, either switch to it directly or wait until next boot:
sudo ./result/bin/switch-to-configuration switch
# or
sudo ./result/bin/switch-to-configuration boot
Note: The Perl script executed by both above commands should create a new bootloader menu entry and mark it as default. However, if I remember correctly, the menu entry was once missing and the configuration change thus not permanent. This might need further testing. See also: https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Nixos-rebuild#Internals
niv: Dependency management
niv:
Easy dependency management for Nix projects.
Nix is a very powerful tool for building code and setting up environments. niv complements it by making it easy to describe and update remote dependencies (URLs, GitHub repos, etc). It is a simple, practical alternative to Nix flakes.
Niv is an easy dependency management for Nix projects with package pinning.
Initialize:
niv init
Change the tracking branch of nixpkgs from unstable to 23.05:
niv modify nixpkgs --branch nixos-23.05
Add Home Manager with niv
Home Manager:
[Home Manager] allows declarative configuration of user specific (non-global) packages and dotfiles.
To avoid breaking users' configurations, Home Manager is released in branches corresponding to NixOS releases ( e.g.
release-23.05
).Home Manager provides both the channel-based setup and the flake-based one.
Check your channel:
sudo nix-channel --list
#=> nixos https://nixos.org/channels/nixos-23.05
Use the corresponding branch:
niv add nix-community/home-manager -n home-manager -b release-23.05
Add NUR with niv
The Nix User Repository (NUR) is community-driven meta repository for Nix packages.
... packages are built from source and are not reviewed by any Nixpkgs member.
niv add nix-community/NUR -n NUR
disko and nixos-anywhere: Remote installation
Install NixOS via SSH everywhere.
There is a separate repository for these steps. Its README can be found here: https://codeberg.org/privacy1st/nixos-anywhere-example/src/template/README.md
Colmena: Deployment and secret management
Colmena is a simple, stateless NixOS deployment tool modeled after NixOps and morph, written in Rust.
Alternative: Deployment with Morph: https://xeiaso.net/blog/morph-setup-2021-04-25
Configuration is done inside hive.nix.
Build config:
colmena build
Apply to all non-local nodes:
colmena apply --on @server switch
#colmena apply --on @server boot
#colmena apply --on @yodaTab switch
#colmena apply --on @yodaTab boot
Apply to local node:
colmena apply-local --sudo switch
#colmena apply-local --sudo boot
Filtering:
- You can filter hosts by tags with
--on @tag-a,@tag-b
. - You can use globs in tag matching as well:
colmena apply --on '@infra-*'
BTRFS swap file
Summary:
- Create subvolume
@swap
directly below top-level subvolume. - Mount at
/swap
- Create swapfile:
sudo btrfs filesystem mkswapfile --size 8g --uuid clear /swap/swapfile
- Regenerate hardware-configuration:
sudo nixos-generate-config --dir hosts/$(hostname)
- Add
swapDevices = [ { device = "/swap/swapfile"; } ];
to hardware configuration and runnixos-rebuild switch
(see above).
LUKS Parameters
Warning: NixOS has a hardcoded timeout of 10 seconds when opening encrypted drives during boot. Please choose --iter-time
<= 5000
.
ed2ccd4d17/nixos/modules/system/boot/luksroot.nix (L498)
ed2ccd4d17/nixos/modules/system/boot/luksroot.nix (L30)
ed2ccd4d17/nixos/modules/system/boot/luksroot.nix (L36C7-L36C7)
Automount encrypted drive
* Generate and add keyfile to LUKS device
- Use the same password for all attached LUKS devices to be only prompted once while booting
- luksOpen and mount drive, e.g. to
/mnt/data1
- Re-generate hardware configuration:
sudo nixos-generate-config --dir hosts/$(hostname)
- If it is an SSD, enable
boot.initrd.luks.devices.<name>.allowDiscards
Failed services
If there are e.g. file conflicts due to preexisting dotfiles, the Home Manager user service might fail. To list all failed services, run:
systemctl --failed
Garbage collection
- https://nixos.org/manual/nix/stable/package-management/garbage-collection.html
- https://discourse.nixos.org/t/why-doesnt-nix-collect-garbage-remove-old-generations-from-efi-menu/17592/4
This is automated in base.nix with the nix.gc
option.
Run manually for all profiles:
sudo nix-collect-garbage --delete-older-than 14d
Remove leftover EFI entries of removed generations:
sudo /run/current-system/bin/switch-to-configuration boot
Run AppImages
# Note how your shell prefix changes.
nix-shell -p appimage-run
# Inside the shell, you can run an AppImage:
appimage-run ~/Downloads/ubports-installer_0.10.0_linux_x86_64.AppImage
General Notes
- There is controversy about flakes, rather use channels (e.g. with niv)
- Prins, P., Suresh, J. and Dolstra, E., "Nix fixes dependency hell on all Linux distributions," Archived December 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine linux.com, December 22, 2008
Nix Pills
It provides a tutorial introduction into the Nix package manager and Nixpkgs package collection, in the form of short chapters called 'pills'.
Papers
Papers about Nix:
- The Purely Functional Software Deployment Model (2006). http://nixos.org/~eelco/pubs/phd-thesis.pdf, https://edolstra.github.io/pubs/phd-thesis.pdf, https://github.com/edolstra/edolstra.github.io/blob/master/pubs/phd-thesis.pdf
- May 2023: Some insights from the thesis in short form. https://jonathanlorimer.dev/posts/nix-thesis.html
- NixOS: A Purely Functional Linux Distribution (2008): https://github.com/edolstra/edolstra.github.io/blob/master/pubs/nixos-icfp2008-final.pdf, https://github.com/edolstra/edolstra.github.io/blob/master/pubs/nixos-jfp-final.pdf
- Nix: A Safe and Policy-Free System for Software Deployment (2004): https://edolstra.github.io/pubs/nspfssd-lisa2004-final.pdf
System information
nix-info -m
- system: `"x86_64-linux"`
- host os: `Linux 6.1.51, NixOS, 23.05 (Stoat), 23.05.3242.da5adce0ffaf`
- multi-user?: `yes`
- sandbox: `yes`
- version: `nix-env (Nix) 2.13.5`
- channels(root): `"nixos-23.05"`
- nixpkgs: `/nix/var/nix/profiles/per-user/root/channels/nixos`
Search for packages
Search for options
- https://search.nixos.org/options?channel=23.05
- Or
man configuration.nix
- Or
- https://mipmip.github.io/home-manager-option-search
- Or
man home-configuration.nix
- Or
Search wich package owns a file
# Note how your shell prefix changes.
nix-shell -p nix-index
# Either build the index manually (requires >12GB RAM):
nix-index
# Or download weekly build:
mkdir -p ~/.cache/nix-index/ && wget -q -N https://github.com/nix-community/nix-index-database/releases/latest/download/index-x86_64-linux -O ~/.cache/nix-index/files
# Then search for a file
nix-locate --whole-name '/bash'
List files of package
Example for nano
:
find $(nix-build '<nixpkgs>' -A nano --no-link)
Excerpt of the result:
/nix/store/jqvxmx65mfinbsm6db9kmcqmphl44xhp-nano-7.2/share/nano
/nix/store/jqvxmx65mfinbsm6db9kmcqmphl44xhp-nano-7.2/share/nano/asm.nanorc
/nix/store/jqvxmx65mfinbsm6db9kmcqmphl44xhp-nano-7.2/share/nano/autoconf.nanorc
Compare two versions of NixOS system profile
Get latest system profile. This is the profile (usually) being active after booting the system:
ls -1 /nix/var/nix/profiles/ | sort -t'-' -n -k2 | tail -n 1
#=> 120
Compare current with previous profile:
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/36641298
prev="$(ls -1 /nix/var/nix/profiles/ | sort -t'-' -n -k2 | tail -n 2 | head -n 1)"
curr="$(ls -1 /nix/var/nix/profiles/ | sort -t'-' -n -k2 | tail -n 1)"
nix --extra-experimental-features nix-command store diff-closures /nix/var/nix/profiles/"${prev}" /nix/var/nix/profiles/"${curr}"
Compare two arbitrary system profiles:
nix --extra-experimental-features nix-command store diff-closures /nix/var/nix/profiles/system-110-link /nix/var/nix/profiles/system-116-link
cpupower: 6.1.47 → 6.1.51
element-desktop: 1.11.38 → 1.11.40, +2218.9 KiB
element-web: 1.11.38 → 1.11.40, -73.1 KiB
exempi: 2.6.3 → 2.6.4
firefox: 116.0.3 → 117.0
firefox-unwrapped: 116.0.3 → 117.0, -292.6 KiB
gnome-shell-extension-openweather: ∅ → 121, +590.5 KiB
hm_fontconfigconf.d10hmfonts.conf: ∅ → ε
initrd: ∅ → ε
initrd-linux: 6.1.47 → 6.1.51
libcap: 2.68 → 2.69
linux: 6.1.47, 6.1.47-modules → 6.1.51, 6.1.51-modules, -11.8 KiB
meld: ∅ → 3.22.0, +3858.5 KiB
net-snmp: 5.9.3 → 5.9.4
nixos-system-yodaTab: 23.05.3085.2ab91c8d65c0 → 23.05.3242.da5adce0ffaf
openjdk: +19.5 KiB
python3.10-pygobject: +27.0 KiB
stage: ∅ → 1-init.sh, +29.5 KiB
tor-browser-bundle-bin: 12.5.2 → 12.5.3, +18.1 KiB
user: +2885.0 KiB
NixOS configuration debugging
Evaluating parts of the configuration.
First, start nix repl
:
nix repl --file '<nixpkgs/nixos>' -I nixos-config=hosts/$(hostname)/configuration.nix
Example: config.home-manager
config.home-manager.
# Press `TAB`
#=> config.home-manager.backupFileExtension config.home-manager.useUserPackages
#=> config.home-manager.extraSpecialArgs config.home-manager.users
#=> config.home-manager.sharedModules config.home-manager.verbose
#=> config.home-manager.useGlobalPkgs
Example: The home
variable:
config.home-manager.users.yoda.home
Example: The value of one config option
# The following option is set to `"${config.xdg.dataHome}/.histfile";`
# where `config` is the Home Manager configuration.
config.home-manager.users.yoda.programs.zsh.history.path
#=> "/home/yoda/.local/share/.histfile"
Show Nix configuration
nix --extra-experimental-features nix-command show-config
Evaluate NixOS configuration to JSON
See also section "NixOS Configuration Debugging"!
This evaluates configuration.nix
(single module):
NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNFREE=1 nix-instantiate --strict --json --eval -E '
import ./hosts/yodaTab/configuration.nix {
config = {};
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {};
lib = import <nixpkgs/lib>;
}
' > evaluated-config.json
Then open evaluated-config.json
.
References
Some references to websites that helped me create this repository:
- https://github.com/Misterio77/nix-starter-configs
- https://github.com/mikeroyal/NixOS-Guide#getting-started
TODOs
-
Nitrokey LUKS unlock
- Yubikey LUKS: https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Yubikey_based_Full_Disk_Encryption_(FDE)_on_NixOS
- Yubikey LUKS: https://github.com/georgewhewell/nixos-host/blob/master/profiles/luks-yubi.nix
- Old wiki entry, initramfs smartcard LUKS unlock: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SmartCardLUKSDiskEncryption#SmartCard_Setup
-
Nitrokey PAM log-in
- https://docs.nitrokey.com/pro/linux/login-with-pam
- You have two options:
pam_p11
orPAM Poldi
. - The solution with pam_p11 is more difficult to achieve and is based on S/MIME certificates.
- You have two options:
- I could not find pam-poldi for NixOS :/
- https://docs.nitrokey.com/pro/linux/login-with-pam
-
Impermanence, opt-in to persistence: https://github.com/Misterio77/nix-starter-configs/tree/main#try-opt-in-persistance
-
nix-shell / lorri
- https://ghedam.at/15978/an-introduction-to-nix-shell
- docker-compose.yml for services and nix-shell to run the code
- https://ghedam.at/15978/an-introduction-to-nix-shell