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Important

This repo is a little out of date at the moment, and is pending a refactor. Please check official documentation for NixOS and home-manager to make sure you're doing things right. See #86 for more info.

Nix Starter Config

This repo contains a few a simple nix flake templates for getting started with NixOS + home-manager.

What this provides

  • Minimal version:
    • NixOS configuration on nixos/configuration.nix, accessible via nixos-rebuild --flake .
    • Home-manager configuration on home-manager/home.nix, accessible via home-manager --flake .
  • Standard version:
    • Basic boilerplate for adding custom packages (under pkgs) and overlays (under overlay). Accessible on your system, home config, as well as nix build .#package-name.
    • Boilerplate for custom NixOS (modules/nixos) and home-manager (modules/home-manager) modules
    • NixOS and home-manager configurations from minimal, and they should also use your overlays and custom packages right out of the box.

Getting started

Assuming you have a basic NixOS booted up (either live or installed, anything works). Here's a link to the latest NixOS downloads, just for you.

Alternatively, you can totally use nix and home-manager on your existing distro (or even on Darwin). Install nix and follow along (just ignore the nixos-* commands).

What template to chose?

If this is your first trying flakes, or you're attempting to migrate your (simple) config to it; you should use the minimal version.

If you're here looking for inspiration/tips/good practices (and you already use flakes), or you're migrating a config that already has overlays and custom packages; try the standard version.

I like your funny words, magic man

Not sure what this all means?

Take a look at the learn hub on the NixOS website (scroll down to guides, the manuals, and the other awesome learning resources).

Learning the basics of what Nix (the package manager) is, how the Nix language works, and a bit of NixOS basics should get you up and running. Don't worry if it seems a little confusing at first. Get confortable with the basic concepts and come back here to get your feet wet, it's the best way to learn!

The repo

  • Install git, if you haven't already.
  • Create a repository for your config, for example:
cd ~/Documents
git init nix-config
cd nix-config
  • Make sure you're running Nix 2.4+, and opt into the experimental flakes and nix-command features:
# Should be 2.4+
nix --version
export NIX_CONFIG="experimental-features = nix-command flakes"
  • Get the template:
# For minimal version
nix flake init -t github:misterio77/nix-starter-config#minimal

# For standard version
nix flake init -t github:misterio77/nix-starter-config#standard
  • If you want to use NixOS: add stuff you currently have on /etc/nixos/ to nixos (usually configuration.nix and hardware-configuration.nix, when you're starting out).
    • The included file has some options you might want, specially if you don't have a configuration ready. Make sure you have generated your own hardware-configuration.nix; if not, just mount your partitions to /mnt and run: nixos-generate-config --root /mnt.
  • If you want to use home-manager: add your stuff from ~/.config/nixpkgs to home-manager (probably home.nix).
    • The included file is also a good starting point if you don't have a config yet.
  • Take a look at flake.nix, making sure to fill out anything marked with FIXME (required) or TODO (usually tips or optional stuff you might want)
  • Update your flake lock with nix flake update, so you get the latest packages and modules
  • git add and git push your changes! Or at least copy them somewhere if you're on a live medium.

Usage

  • Run sudo nixos-rebuild switch --flake .#hostname to apply your system configuration.
    • If you're still on a live installation medium, run nixos-install --flake .#hostname instead, and reboot.
  • Run home-manager switch --flake .#username@hostname to apply your home configuration.
    • If you don't have home-manager installed, try nix shell nixpkgs#home-manager.

And that's it, really! You're ready to have fun with your configurations using the latest and greatest nix3 flake-enabled command UX.

What next?

Use home-manager as a NixOS module

If you prefer to build your home configuration together with your NixOS one, it's pretty simple.

Simply remove the homeConfigurations block from the flake.nix file; then add this to your NixOS configuration (either directly on nixos/configuration.nix or on a separate file and import it):

{ inputs, outputs, ... }: {
  imports = [
    # Import home-manager's NixOS module
    inputs.home-manager.nixosModules.home-manager
  ];

  home-manager = {
    extraSpecialArgs = { inherit inputs outputs; };
    users = {
      # Import your home-manager configuration
      your-username = import ../home-manager/home.nix;
    };
  };
}

In this setup, the home-manager tool will not be installed (see nix-community/home-manager#4342). To rebuild your home configuration, use nixos-rebuild instead.

But if you want to install the home-manager tool anyways, you can add the package into your configuration:

# To install it for a specific user
users.users = {
  your-username = {
    packages = [ inputs.home-manager.packages.${pkgs.system}.default ];
  };
};

# To install it globally
environment.systemPackages =
  [ inputs.home-manager.packages.${pkgs.system}.default ];

Adding more hosts or users

You can organize them by hostname and username on nixos and home-manager directories, be sure to also add them to flake.nix.

You can take a look at my (beware, here be reproductible dragons) configuration repo for ideas.

NixOS makes it easy to share common configuration between hosts (you might want to create a common directory for these), while keeping everything in sync. home-manager can help you sync your environment (from editor to WM and everything in between) anywhere you use it. Have fun!

User password and secrets

You have basically two ways of setting up default passwords:

  • By default, you'll be prompted for a root password when installing with nixos-install. After you reboot, be sure to add a password to your own account and lock root using sudo passwd -l root.
  • Alternatively, you can specify initialPassword for your user. This will give your account a default password, be sure to change it after rebooting! If you do, you should pass --no-root-passwd to nixos-install, to skip setting a password on the root account.

If you don't want to set your password imperatively, you can also use passwordFile for safely and declaratively setting a password from a file outside the nix store.

There's also more advanced options for secret management, including some that can include them (encrypted) into your config repo and/or nix store, be sure to check them out if you're interested.

Dotfile management with home-manager

Besides just adding packages to your environment, home-manager can also manage your dotfiles. I strongly recommend you do, it's awesome!

For full nix goodness, check out the home-manager options with man home-configuration.nix. Using them, you'll be able to fully configure any program with nix syntax and its powerful abstractions.

Alternatively, if you're still not ready to rewrite all your configs to nix syntax, there's home-manager options (such as xdg.configFile) for including files from your config repository into your usual dot directories. Add your existing dotfiles to this repo and try it out!

Try opt-in persistance

You might have noticed that there's impurity in your NixOS system, in the form of configuration files and other cruft your system generates when running. What if you change them in a whim to get something working and forget about it? Boom, your system is not fully reproductible anymore.

You can instead fully delete your / and /home on every boot! Nix is okay with a empty root on boot (all you need is /boot and /nix), and will happily reapply your configurations.

There's two main approaches to this: mount a tmpfs (RAM disk) to /, or (using a filesystem such as btrfs or zfs) mount a blank snapshot and reset it on boot.

For stuff that can't be managed through nix (such as games downloaded from steam, or logs), use impermanence for mounting stuff you to keep to a separate partition/volume (such as /nix/persist or /persist). This makes everything vanish by default, and you can keep track of what you specifically asked to be kept.

Here's some awesome blog posts about it:

Note that for home-manager to work correctly here, you need to set up its NixOS module, as described in the previous section.

Adding custom packages

Something you want to use that's not in nixpkgs yet? You can easily build and iterate on a derivation (package) from this very repository.

Create a folder with the desired name inside pkgs, and add a default.nix file containing a derivation. Be sure to also callPackage them on pkgs/default.nix.

You'll be able to refer to that package from anywhere on your home-manager/nixos configurations, build them with nix build .#package-name, or bring them into your shell with nix shell .#package-name.

See the manual for some tips on how to package stuff.

Adding overlays

Found some outdated package on nixpkgs you need the latest version of? Perhaps you want to apply a patch to fix a behaviour you don't like? Nix makes it easy and manageble with overlays!

Use the overlays/default.nix file for this.

If you're creating patches, you can keep them on the overlays folder as well.

See the wiki article to see how it all works.

Adding your own modules

Got some configurations you want to create an abstraction of? Modules are the answer. These awesome files can expose options and implement configurations based on how the options are set.

Create a file for them on either modules/nixos or modules/home-manager. Be sure to also add them to the listing at modules/nixos/default.nix or modules/home-manager/default.nix.

See the wiki article to learn more about them.

Troubleshooting / FAQ

Please let me know any questions or issues you face with these templates, so I can add more info here!

Nix says my repo files don't exist, even though they do!

Nix flakes only see files that git is currently tracked, so just git add . and you should be good to go. Files on .gitignore, of course, are invisible to nix - this is to guarantee your build won't depend on anything that is not on your repo.

Nix installs the wrong version of software/fails to find new software

The nix dependencies (such as nixpkgs) used by your configuration will strictly follow the flake.lock file, using the commits written into it when you (re)generated.

To update your flake inputs, simply use nix flake update.