forked from Fachschaft/nixConfig
added documentation for new systems
This commit is contained in:
parent
e80eb2dc33
commit
3cac8d6b14
1 changed files with 85 additions and 0 deletions
85
README.md
85
README.md
|
@ -91,6 +91,91 @@ If the hostname is not correct, or you don't want to clone this flake you can al
|
|||
|
||||
In any case, to switch the system configuration you will need to have root privileges on the target machine.
|
||||
|
||||
## Installing a new machine
|
||||
|
||||
You have written a configuration and now want to deploy it as a new machine. You need to get the build configuration on the
|
||||
`nixos-installer` machine (regarding this machine see issue [#10]). You can either use either any of the
|
||||
versions above, or just continue then the machine will build the configuration implicitly.
|
||||
|
||||
### Disk layout
|
||||
|
||||
You will need to assemble the disk layout manually, we assume you do it below `/mnt` as the nixos-install tools
|
||||
assume this as the default location (they have an option to change that consider their `--help` pages).
|
||||
|
||||
This repository loads some default configuration that expects certain things. Your hardware configuration of that machine should
|
||||
reflect those.
|
||||
|
||||
- `"/"` is a tmpfs
|
||||
- `"/persist"` is the place where we keep data that can not be regenerated at any boot, so this should be a permanent disk
|
||||
- `"/nix"` the place the nixstore resides, needed to boot the machine should also be persistent
|
||||
- `"/boot"` the place for bootloader configuration and kernel also persistent
|
||||
- any additional data paths for your machine specific needs. Choose filesystems accordingly.
|
||||
|
||||
My recommendation is to put `"/persist"` and `"/nix"` on a joint btrfs as subvolumes and `"/boot"` on separate disks (because grub
|
||||
will give you a hard time if you do it as a subvolume or bind mount (even though that should be possible but is an upstream problem)).
|
||||
For how to configure additional persistent data
|
||||
to be stored in `"/persist"` look at the impermanence section as soon it is merged. Before this look at issue [#9].
|
||||
I do not recommend this for actual high access application data like databases mailboxes and things like it. You should
|
||||
think about this as data that if lost can be regenerated with only little problems and read/written only a few times
|
||||
during setup. (Like the server ssh keys for example). The configuration also setups some paths for `"/persist"` automatically,
|
||||
again look at the impermanence sections.
|
||||
|
||||
#### File system uuids
|
||||
|
||||
You might end with a bit of a chicken/egg problem regarding filesystem uuids. See you need to set them in your system configuration.
|
||||
There are two ways around that. Either generate the filesystems read out the uuids, and push them into the repository holding
|
||||
the configuration you want to build, or generate the uuids first, have them in your configuration and set them upon filesystem creation. Most
|
||||
`mkfs` utilities have an option for that.
|
||||
|
||||
### Installing
|
||||
|
||||
Just run
|
||||
```
|
||||
nixos-install --flake 'git+https://gitea.mathebau.de/Fachschaft/nixConfig?ref=<branchname>#<name>'
|
||||
```
|
||||
where `<branchname>` is the branch you install from and `<name>` is the name of the configuration you build.
|
||||
If the build system is already in the nix store this will start the installation, else it will first attempt to build
|
||||
it. That should be the whole installation process, just reboot. The machine should be fully setup. No additional user
|
||||
or service setup, after the reboot.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## How to write a new machine configuration
|
||||
At best you take a first look at already existing configurations. But here are a few guidelines.
|
||||
Make a new folder in `/nixos/machines`. The name of the folder should match the hostname of your
|
||||
machine. The only technically required file in there is `configuration.nix`. So create it.
|
||||
|
||||
A good skeleton is probably:
|
||||
```
|
||||
flake-inputs:
|
||||
{config, pkgs, lib, ... }: {
|
||||
|
||||
imports = [
|
||||
./hardware-configuration.nix
|
||||
../../roles
|
||||
./network.nix
|
||||
|
||||
<your additional imports here>
|
||||
|
||||
];
|
||||
|
||||
<your system config here>
|
||||
networking.hostname = "<your hostname>"; # this will hopefully disappear if I have time to refactor this.
|
||||
system.stateVersion = "<state version at time of install>";
|
||||
}
|
||||
```
|
||||
the import of `../../roles` loads all the nice default setup that all these machines have in common. There the
|
||||
impermanence configuration is loaded as well as ssh, sops, shared user configuration and much more.
|
||||
The other two imports are suggestions how you should organize your configuration but not enforced by anything.
|
||||
In your hardware
|
||||
configuration you should basically only write you filesystem layout and your hostPlatform. The bootloading stuff
|
||||
is already taken care of by `../../roles`.
|
||||
|
||||
As of moment of writing `network.nix` should contain ip, nameserver and default gateway setup. As parts of
|
||||
this is constant across all systems this will undergo refactor soon.
|
||||
|
||||
I would recommend to split your configuration into small files you import. If this is something machine specific (like
|
||||
tied to your ip address hostname) put it into the machine directory. If it is not put it into `/nixos/roles/` if it
|
||||
is not but has options to set put it in `/nixos/modules`.
|
||||
|
||||
## How this flake is organized
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue