forked from extern/nixos-installer
1a47c3fa75
disable ZFS hibernation (workaround), enable (very very slow) cross-ISA VM installation |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
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 are by default when importing ../../modules/installer.nix.md
) set as config.installer.scripts.*
.
mkSystemsFlake
then 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 override the functions of these (earlier) default scripts, e.g.:
{ config.installer.scripts.override = { path = .../override.sh; order = 1500; }; }
See nix run .#$HOST -- --help
to see how to use the result.
Development Notes
- The functions are designed to be (and by default are) executed with the bash options
pipefail
andnounset
(-u
) set. - When the functions are executed,
generic-arg-parse
has already been called on the CLI arguments, and the parsed result can be accessed as"${args[<name>]:-}"
for named arguments and"${argv[<index>]}"
for positional arguments (except the first one, which has been removed and used as the command or name of the entry function to run). - When adding functions that are meant to be called as top-level
COMMAND
s, make sure to document them by callingdeclare-command
. See esp.maintenance.sh
for examples. Similarly, usedeclare-flag
to add new flags to the--help
output. - Do not use
set -e
. It has some unexpected and unpredictable behavior, and does not actually provide the expected semantic of "exit the shell if a command fails (exits != 0)". For example, the internal exit behavior of commands in a function depends on how the function is called. - If the
--debug
flag is passed, thenreturn
andexit
are aliased to open a shell when$?
is not zero. This effectively turns any|| return
/|| exit
into break-on-error point.- The aliasing does not work if an explicit code is provided to
return
orexit
. In these cases, or where the breakpoint behavior is not desired, use\return
or\exit
(since the\
suppresses the alias expansion). - For/in loops, do not write to /
read
from stdin/fd1, which conflicts with thereturn
/exit
aliasing. Instead use a different file descriptor, e.g.:while read -u3 a b c ; do ... done 3< <( LC_ALL=C sort ... )
. - Similarly in functions that expect stdin data, read all of it before using the first
|| return
.
- The aliasing does not work if an explicit code is provided to
@{native}
is an instance ofnixpkgs
for the calling system (not the target system) with the overlays (implicitly or explicitly) passed tomkSystemsFlake
applied, but without othernixpkgs.overlays
set by the system configuration itself.