6a4e683ab8
This reverts commit
|
||
---|---|---|
letsencrypt | ||
resources | ||
sp-modules | ||
webserver | ||
.gitignore | ||
configuration.nix | ||
flake.lock | ||
flake.nix | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
selfprivacy-module.nix | ||
users.nix | ||
volumes.nix |
SelfPrivacy NixOS configuration
This configuration is not self-contained, as it needs to be plugged as an input of a top-level NixOS configuration flake (i.e. https://git.selfprivacy.org/SelfPrivacy/selfprivacy-nixos-template/). This flake outputs the following function:
nixosConfigurations-fun =
{ hardware-configuration # hardware-configuration.nix file
, deployment # deployment.nix file
, userdata # nix attrset, obtained by fromJSON from userdata.json
, top-level-flake # `self`-reference of the top-level flake
, sp-modules # flake inputs of sp-modules flake
}:
which returns one or more attributes, containing NixOS configurations (created with nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem
). (As of 2024-01-10 there is only a single configuration named default
.)
updating flake inputs
We have 2 flake inputs:
- nixpkgs
- selfprivacy-api
Both get updated the same ways.
There are 2 methods:
- specify input name only in a command, relying on URL inside
flake.nix
- specify input name and URL in a command, overriding whatever URL is inside
flake.nix
for the input to update (override)
In any case a Nix flake input is specified using some special references syntax, including URLs, revisions, etc, described in manual: https://nixos.org/manual/nix/stable/command-ref/new-cli/nix3-flake.html#examples. Such reference can be used inside flake.nix
or as an argument to nix flake
commands. When a new reference is encountered Nix downloads and extracts it to /nix/store.
Before and after running nix flake lock
(or nix flake update
) commands you would most likely want to list current inputs using nix flake metadata
, which are read from flake.lock
file. Although, Nix should also print a diff between changed references once changed.
--commit-lock-file
option tells Nix commands to do git commit flake.lock
automatically, creating a new commit for you.
method 1: update specific input
Example:
$ nix flake lock --update-input nixpkgs
$ nix flake lock --update-input selfprivacy-api
Depending on how "precise" the URL was speficied in flake.nix
, with unmodified flake.nix
the result might be:
- URL with
rev
(sha1) parameter => nothing will update (as we're already at exact commit) - URL with
ref
(branch) parameter => input will update to the latest commit of the specified branch - URL without
rev
norref
=> input will update to the latest commit of a default branch!
Once Nix 2.19 stabilizes, a different command must be used for updating a single input (recursively), like this:
$ nix flake update nixpkgs
method 2: override specific input
Overriding is more powerful (for non-nested flakes) as it allows to change a flake input reference to anything just in one command (not only update in the bounds of a branch or a repository).
Example:
$ nix flake lock --override-input nixpkgs github:nixos/nixpkgs?ref=nixos-23.11
$ nix flake lock --override-input selfprivacy-api git+https://git.selfprivacy.org/SelfPrivacy/selfprivacy-rest-api.git?ref=flakes
Similarly to update mechanism (described above), depending on the "precision" of an URL, its update scope varies accordingly.
Note, that subsequent calls of nix flake lock --update-input <INPUT>
or nix flake update
(or nix flake update INPUT
by Nix 2.19+) will update the input regardless of the prior override. The information about override is stored only in flake.lock
(flake.nix
is not altered by Nix).
Note, that override does not update flake inputs recursively (say, you have a flake nested inside your flake input). For recursive updates only nix flake lock --update-input
and nix flake update
mechanisms are suitable. However, as of 2024-01-10 none of the SP NixOS configuration inputs contain other flakes, hence override mechanism is fine (don't confuse with top-level flake which has nested inputs).