a4ae2ab551
- disable wip.fs.disks.devices.*.gptOffset (patch broken with 22.11), - add wip.bootloader.extlinux, - add wip.hardware.hetzner-vps profile, - fix wip.services.dropbear.socketActivation, |
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.. | ||
add-key.sh | ||
default.nix | ||
disk.sh | ||
install.sh | ||
keys.sh | ||
maintenance.sh | ||
README.md | ||
utils.sh | ||
zfs.sh |
Host Setup Scripts
This is a library of bash functions, mostly for NixOS system installation.
The (paths to these) scripts are meant to be (and by default are) set as config.wip.setup.scripts.*
(see ../flakes.nix
), which makes their functions available in the per-host devShells
/apps
.
Host-specific nix variables are available to the bash functions as @{...}
through substituteImplicit
with the respective host as root context.
Any script passed later in scripts
can overwrite the functions of these (earlier) default scripts.
With the functions from here, a simple three-liner is enough to do a completely automated NixOS installation:
function install-system {( set -eu # 1: diskPaths
prepare-installer "$@"
do-disk-setup "${argv[0]}"
install-system-to $mnt
)}
install-system
Documentation
For repositories that use the lib.wip.mkSystemsFlake
Nix function in their flake.nix
, the above bash function performs the automated installation of any nixosConfigurations.$HOST
s (where the host's configurations would usually be placed in the /hosts/
directory of the repository) to the local disk(s) (or image file(s)) $DISK
.
On a NixOS host or with a Nix multi-user installation, this can be run by root as: #
nix run .#"$HOST" -- install-system "$DISK"
.
Doing an installation on non-NixOS (but Linux), where nix isn't installed for root, the process is a bit of a hack, but works as well.
In this case, all nix
commands will be run as $SUDO_USER
, but this script and some other user-owned (or user-generated) code will (need to) be run as root.
If that is acceptable, run with sudo
as first argument: $
nix run .#"$HOST" -- sudo install-system "$DISK"
(And then maybe sudo bash -c 'chown $SUDO_USER: '"$DISK"
afterwards.)
If $DISK
points to something in /dev/
, then it is directly formatted and written to as block device, otherwise $DISK
is (re-)created as raw image and then used as loop device.
For hosts that install to multiple disks, pass a :
-separated list of <disk-name>=<path>
pairs (the name may be omitted only for the "default
" disk).
Once done, the disk can be transferred -- or the image be copied -- to the final system, and should boot there.
If the host's hardware target allows, a resulting image can also be passed to register-vbox
to create a bootable VirtualBox instance for the current user, or to run-qemu
to start it in a qemu VM.
The "Installation" section of each host's documentation should contain host specific details, if any.