oizys/README.md
2020-10-24 21:08:09 -07:00

1.7 KiB

nixos-flake-example

This shows how to build the same config, with and without flakes.

It also shows that flake.nix is basically just some syntax.

overview

Note that these produce the same output:

  1. with flakes:

    nix build '.#nixosConfigurations.mysystem.config.system.build.toplevel'
    readlink -f result
    /nix/store/0imi716z1qd04pfh4zdw6mb0gnxmakjs-nixos-system-nixos-21.03.20201020.007126e
    
    nixos-rebuild build --flake '.#mysystem'
    readlink -f result
    /nix/store/0imi716z1qd04pfh4zdw6mb0gnxmakjs-nixos-system-nixos-21.03.20201020.007126e
    

    Note, nixos-rebuild is basically just some magic to build the right derivation and then set it as a system profile, and activate it.

  2. without flakes:

    export NIX_PATH=nixos-config=$(pwd)/configuration.nix:nixpkgs=https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs/archive/nixos-unstable.tar.gz
    
    
    /nix/store/zidq625i13hvbbs8alkklj8k6a191xix-nixos-system-nixos-21.03pre-git
    

    Note, same path same inner system, just much slower due to no eval cache. (they should be identical, but the flake version suffix is slightly different)

They build the same thing, the flake.nix just moves the redirection from the NixOS channel system into the flake instead.

Note, if you come back and run this later, you may need to tell nix to update the nixpkgs that it has pinned in flake.lock by running nix flake update --update-input nixpkgs. The non-flake example is going to re-download the nixos-unstable build when the cache expires. This could cause any hash differences if they're on different revs. (again, another reason to have control of it via flakes, and can lock it directly in the source.)