ZFS: Difference between revisions

From NixOS Wiki
imported>Cyounkins
(Under ZED, moved msmtp doc into separate page)
(Add short command to know the difference between different disk/by-* paths)
 
(58 intermediate revisions by 26 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[NixOS]] has native support for ZFS ([[wikipedia:ZFS]]). It uses the code from the [http://zfsonlinux.org/ ZFS on Linux project], including kernel modules and userspace utilities. The installation isos also come with zfs.
[https://zfsonlinux.org/ {{PAGENAME}}] ([[wikipedia:en:{{PAGENAME}}]]) - also known as [https://openzfs.org/ OpenZFS] ([[wikipedia:en:OpenZFS]]) - is a modern filesystem[[category:filesystem]] which is well supported on [[NixOS]].


== What works ==
There are a lot of packages for [[{{PAGENAME}}]]. For example there is the ''zfs'' package (''ZFS Filesystem Linux Kernel module'') itself.<ref>https://search.nixos.org/packages?channel=unstable&show=zfs&query=zfs</ref> But there are also a lot of packages of the [[{{PAGENAME}}]] ecosystem available.


All functionality supported by ZFS on Linux, including:
[[{{PAGENAME}}]] integrates into NixOS via its [[module]] system.  Examples:
* Using ZFS as the root filesystem (using either MS-DOS or GPT partitions)
* ''boot.zfs''<ref>https://search.nixos.org/options?channel=unstable&query=boot.zfs</ref>
* Encrypted ZFS pools (using either native encryption or Linux's dm-crypt)
* ''service.zfs''<ref>https://search.nixos.org/options?channel=unstable&query=services.zfs</ref>
* All the other ZFS goodies (cheap snapshotting, checksumming, compression, RAID-Z, …)
* Auto-snapshotting service


== Known issues ==
== Limitations ==
{{note|Setting <code><nowiki>boot.zfs.enableUnstable = true;</nowiki></code> is required if you are running an newer kernel which is not yet officially supported by zfs, otherwise the zfs module will refuse to evaluate and show up as ''broken''. This will install a pre-release of zfs. This might be not as stable as a released version. However, in the past this has rarely led to problems/stability issues}}


* Using NixOS on a ZFS root file system might result in the boot error ''external pointer tables not supported'' when the number of hardlinks in the nix store gets very high. This can be avoided by adding this option to your <code>configuration.nix</code> file:
==== latestCompatibleLinuxPackages of ZFS for boot.kernelPackages ====
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
boot.loader.grub.copyKernels = true;
</syntaxhighlight>


* In contrast to many native Linux filesystems, ZFS misses support for freeze/thaw operations. This means that using ZFS together with hibernation (suspend to disk) may cause filesystem corruption. See https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/issues/260 (closed in favour of follow-up issues https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/issues/12842 and https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/issues/12843).
Newest kernels might not be supported by ZFS yet. If you are running an newer kernel which is not yet officially supported by zfs, the zfs module will refuse to evaluate and show up as ''broken''. Use <code>boot.kernelPackages = config.boot.zfs.package.latestCompatibleLinuxPackages;</code> to use the latest compatible kernel.


{{note|For now, setting <code><nowiki>boot.kernelParams = [ "nohibernate" ];</nowiki></code>is necessary to avoid the issue described above.}}
==== partial support for SWAP on ZFS ====


ZFS does not support swapfiles. SWAP devices must be used instead. Additionally, hibernation is disabled by default due to a [https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/208037 high risk] of data corruption. Note that even if / after that pull request is merged, it does not fully mitigate the risk. If you wish to enable hibernation regardless, set <code>boot.zfs.allowHibernation = true</code>.


== Caveats ==  
==== boot.zfs.devNodes ====


* (ZFS, unrelated to Nix- see https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/issues/7734) You shouldn't use a ZVol as a swap device, as it can deadlock under memory pressure.
If NixOS fails to import the zpool on reboot, you may need to add <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>boot.zfs.devNodes = "/dev/disk/by-path";</syntaxhighlight> or <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>boot.zfs.devNodes = "/dev/disk/by-partuuid";</syntaxhighlight> to your configuration.nix file.
* You should set the <code>mountpoint</code> property of your ZFS filesystems to be <code>legacy</code> and let NixOS mount them like any other filesystem (such as ''ext4'' or ''btrfs''), otherwise some filesystems may fail to mount due to ordering issues.
* By default, all ZFS pools available to the system will be forcibly imported during boot, regardless if you had imported them before or not. You should be careful not to have any other system accessing them at the same time, otherwise it will corrupt your pools. Normally (for the common desktop user) this should not be a problem, as a hard disk is usually only directly connected to one machine. This behaviour can be disabled by setting <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>boot.zfs.forceImportAll = false;</syntaxhighlight>.
* If you create a zpool in the installer, make sure you run <code>zpool export <pool name></code> after <code>nixos-install</code>, or else when you reboot into your new system, zfs will fail to import the zpool.
* If you are running within a VM and NixOS fails to import the zpool on reboot, you may need to add <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>boot.zfs.devNodes = "/dev/disk/by-path";</syntaxhighlight> to your configuration.nix file.


The differences can be tested by running <code>zpool import -d /dev/disk/by-id</code> when none of the pools are discovered, eg. a live iso.


== How to use it ==
==== declarative mounting of ZFS datasets ====


{{warning|Add all mounts necessary for booting to your configuration as legacy mounts as described in this article instead of zfs's own mount mechanism. Otherwise mounts might be not mounted in the correct order during boot!}}
When using legacy mountpoints (created with eg<code>zfs create -o mountpoint=legacy</code>) mountpoints must be specified with <code>fileSystems."/mount/point" = {};</code>. ZFS native mountpoints are not managed as part of the system configuration but better support hibernation with a separate swap partition. This can lead to conflicts if ZFS mount service is also enabled for the same datasets. Disable it with <code>systemd.services.zfs-mount.enable = false;</code>.


Just add the following to your <code>configuration.nix</code> file:
== Guides ==
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
# boot.initrd.supportedFilesystems = [ "zfs" ]; # Not required if zfs is root-fs (extracted from filesystems)
# boot.supportedFilesystems = [ "zfs" ]; # Not required if zfs is root-fs (extracted from filesystems)
services.udev.extraRules = ''
  ACTION=="add|change", KERNEL=="sd[a-z]*[0-9]*|mmcblk[0-9]*p[0-9]*|nvme[0-9]*n[0-9]*p[0-9]*", ENV{ID_FS_TYPE}=="zfs_member", ATTR{../queue/scheduler}="none"
''; # zfs already has its own scheduler. without this my(@Artturin) computer froze for a second when i nix build something.
</syntaxhighlight>


Be sure to also set <code>networking.hostId</code>, see https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/options.html#opt-networking.hostId (Why- https://discourse.nixos.org/t/feedback-on-a-user-guide-i-created-on-installing-nixos-with-zfs/5986/4?u=srgom)
==== '''OpenZFS Documentation for installing''' ====


To activate the configuration and load the ZFS kernel module, run:
{{warning|This guide is not endorsed by NixOS and some features like immutable root do not have upstream support and could break on updates. If an issue arises while following this guide, please consult the guides support channels.}}
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# nixos-rebuild switch
</syntaxhighlight>


All ZFS functionality should now be available.
One guide for a NixOS installation with ZFS is maintained at [https://openzfs.github.io/openzfs-docs/Getting%20Started/NixOS/ OpenZFS Documentation (''Getting Started'' for ''NixOS'')]


If you want NixOS to auto-mount your ZFS filesystems during boot, you should set their <code>mountpoint</code> property to <code>legacy</code> and treat it like if it were any other filesystem, i.e.: mount the filesystem manually and regenerate your list of filesystems, as such:
It is about:
* [https://openzfs.github.io/openzfs-docs/Getting%20Started/NixOS/index.html#installation enabling ZFS on an existing NixOS installation] and
* [https://openzfs.github.io/openzfs-docs/Getting%20Started/NixOS/#root-on-zfs (installing NixOS with) Root on ZFS].


<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
It is not about:
# zfs set mountpoint=legacy <pool>/<fs>
* Give understandable, easy to follow and close to the standard installation guide instructions
</syntaxhighlight>
* integrating ZFS into your existing config


<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# mount -t zfs <pool>/<fs> <mountpoint>
</syntaxhighlight>


This will regenerate your /etc/nixos/hardware-configuration.nix file:
==== '''Simple NixOS ZFS installation''' ====
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# nixos-generate-config
</syntaxhighlight>


<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
Start from here in the NixOS manual: [https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/#sec-installation-manual].
# nixos-rebuild switch
Under manual partitioning [https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/#sec-installation-manual-partitioning] do this instead:
</syntaxhighlight>


NixOS will now make sure that your filesystem is always mounted during boot.
'''Partition your disk with your favorite partition tool.'''


The <code>nixos-generate-config</code> command regenerates your <code>/etc/nixos/hardware-configuration.nix</code> file, which includes the list of filesystems for NixOS to mount during boot, e.g.:
We need the following partitions:
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
fileSystems."/home" =
  { device = "rpool/home";
    fsType = "zfs";
  };


fileSystems."/backup" =
* 1G for boot partition with "boot" as the partition label (also called name in some tools) and ef00 as partition code
  { device = "rpool/backup";
* 10G for a swap partition with "swap" as the partition label and 8200 as partition code. We will encrypt this with a random secret on each boot.
    fsType = "zfs";
* The rest of disk space for zfs with "root" as the partition label and 8300 as partition code (default code)
  };
</syntaxhighlight>


Alternatively, if you do not mind maintaining some manual tweaks to your Nix hardware configuration, you can avoid using the ZFS legacy mounting option if you add <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>options = [ "zfsutil" ];</syntaxhighlight> to your filesystem definitions.  e.g. the above would become.
Reason for swap partition: ZFS does use a caching mechanism that is different from the normal Linux cache infrastructure.
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
In low-memory situations, ZFS therefore might need a bit longer to free up memory from its cache. The swap partition will help with that.
fileSystems."/home" =
  { device = "rpool/home";
    fsType = "zfs";
    options = [ "zfsutil" ];
  };


fileSystems."/backup" =
Example output from fdisk:
  { device = "rpool/backup";
    fsType = "zfs";
    options = [ "zfsutil" ];
  };
</syntaxhighlight>


Keep your filesystem defintions in a file separate from <code>/etc/nixos/hardware-configuration.nix</code>, since this is overwritten whenever you run <code>nixos-generate-config</code>.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
sudo gdisk /dev/nvme0n1
GPT fdisk (gdisk) version 1.0.9.1
...
Command (? for help): p
Disk /dev/nvme0n1: 500118192 sectors, 238.5 GiB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512/512 bytes
Disk identifier (GUID): CA926E8C-47F6-416A-AD1A-C2190CF5D1F8
Partition table holds up to 128 entries
Main partition table begins at sector 2 and ends at sector 33
First usable sector is 34, last usable sector is 500118158
Partitions will be aligned on 2048-sector boundaries
Total free space is 2669 sectors (1.3 MiB)


== Changing the cache size ==
Number  Start (sector)    End (sector)  Size      Code  Name
  1            2048        2099199  1024.0 MiB  EF00  boot
  2        2099200        23070719  10.0 GiB    8200  swap
  3        23070720      500117503  227.5 GiB  8300  root


ZFS has a complicated cache system.  The cache you're most likely to want to fiddle with is the called Adaptive Replacement Cache, usually abbreviated ARC.  This is the first-level (fastest) of ZFS's caches.
Command (? for help):
</syntaxhighlight>


You can increase or decrease a parameter which represents approximately the maximum size of the ARC cache.  You can't set its actual size (ZFS does that adaptively according to its workload), nor can you set its exact maximum size.
'''Make zfs pool with encryption and mount points:'''


To change the maximum size of the ARC cache to (for example) 12 GB, add this to your NixOS configuration:
'''Note:''' zpool config can significantly affect performance (especially the ashift option) so you may want to do some research. The [https://jrs-s.net/2018/08/17/zfs-tuning-cheat-sheet/ ZFS tuning cheatsheet] or [https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/ZFS#Storage_pools ArchWiki] is a good place to start.
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
boot.kernelParams = [ "zfs.zfs_arc_max=12884901888" ];
zpool create -O encryption=on -O keyformat=passphrase -O keylocation=prompt -O compression=zstd -O mountpoint=none -O xattr=sa -O acltype=posixacl -o ashift=12 zpool /dev/nvme0n1p2
</syntaxhighlight>


In some versions of ZFS, you can change the maximum size of the ARC on the fly, but in NixOS 18.03 this is not possible.  (Nor is it possible in other versions of ZFS on Linux yet, according to Stack Exchange.)
zfs create zpool/root
zfs create zpool/nix
zfs create zpool/var
zfs create zpool/home


== Automatic scrubbing ==
mkdir -p /mnt
mount -t zfs zpool/root /mnt -o zfsutil
mkdir /mnt/nix /mnt/var /mnt/home


Regular scrubbing of ZFS pools is recommended and can be enabled in your NixOS configuration via:
mount -t zfs zpool/nix /mnt/nix -o zfsutil
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
mount -t zfs zpool/var /mnt/var -o zfsutil
services.zfs.autoScrub.enable = true;
mount -t zfs zpool/home /mnt/home -o zfsutil
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


You can tweak the interval (defaults to once a week) and which pools should be scrubbed (defaults to all).
Output from <syntaxhighlight lang="bash" inline>zpool status</syntaxhighlight>:
<syntaxhighlight >
zpool status
  pool: zpool
state: ONLINE
...
config:


== Reservations ==
NAME                              STATE    READ WRITE CKSUM
zpool                              ONLINE      0    0    0
  nvme-eui.0025384b21406566-part2  ONLINE      0    0    0


Since zfs is a copy-on-write filesystem even for deleting files disk space is needed. Therefore it should be avoided to run out of disk space. Luckily it is possible to reserve disk space for datasets to prevent this.
To reserve space create a new unused dataset that gets a guaranteed disk space of 1GB.
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# zfs create -o refreservation=1G -o mountpoint=none zroot/reserved
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


where <code>zroot</code> should be replaced by a dataset in your pool.
'''Make fat filesystem on boot partition'''
The dataset itself should not be used. In case you would run out of space you can shrink the reservation to reclaim enough disk space to cleanup the other data from the pool:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
 
mkfs.fat -F 32 -n boot /dev/nvme0n1p1
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# zfs set refreservation=none zroot/reserved
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


== How to use the auto-snapshotting service ==


To auto-snapshot a ZFS filesystem or a ZVol, set its <code>com.sun:auto-snapshot</code> property to <code>true</code>, like this:
'''Installation:'''


<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
Install: [https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/#sec-installation-manual-installing]
# zfs set com.sun:auto-snapshot=true <pool>/<fs>
</syntaxhighlight>


(Note that by default this property will be inherited by all descendent datasets, but you can set their properties to false if you prefer.)
Jump to "2. UEFI systems"


Then, to enable the auto-snapshot service, add this to your <code>configuration.nix</code>:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
mkdir -p /mnt/boot
services.zfs.autoSnapshot.enable = true;
mount /dev/disk/by-partlabel/boot /mnt/boot
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


And finally, run <code>nixos-rebuild switch</code> to activate the new configuration!
Jump to "4." ... /mnt/etc/nixos/configuration.nix ...


By default, the auto-snapshot service will keep the latest four 15-minute, 24 hourly, 7 daily, 4 weekly and 12 monthly snapshots.
Continue from here and add this boot loader and filesystems config to your configuration.nix:
You can globally override this configuration by setting the desired number of snapshots in your <code>configuration.nix</code>, like this:


<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
services.zfs.autoSnapshot = {
{
   enable = true;
   # Boot loader config for configuration.nix:
   frequent = 8; # keep the latest eight 15-minute snapshots (instead of four)
   boot.loader.systemd-boot.enable = true;
  monthly = 1; # keep only one monthly snapshot (instead of twelve)
};
</syntaxhighlight>


You can also disable a given type of snapshots on a per-dataset basis by setting a ZFS property, like this:
  # for local disks that are not shared over the network, we don't need this to be random
  networking.hostId = "8425e349";


<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
  fileSystems."/" = {
# zfs set com.sun:auto-snapshot:weekly=false <pool>/<fs>
    device = "zpool/root";
</syntaxhighlight>
    fsType = "zfs";
    # the zfsutil option is needed when mounting zfs datasets without "legacy" mountpoints
    options = [ "zfsutil" ];
  };


This would disable only weekly snapshots on the given filesystem.
  fileSystems."/nix" = {
    device = "zpool/nix";
    fsType = "zfs";
    options = [ "zfsutil" ];
  };


== Installing NixOS on a ZFS root filesystem ==
  fileSystems."/var" = {
    device = "zpool/var";
    fsType = "zfs";
    options = [ "zfsutil" ];
  };


Another guide titled "Encrypted ZFS mirror with mirrored boot on NixOS" is available at https://elis.nu/blog/2019/08/encrypted-zfs-mirror-with-mirrored-boot-on-nixos/.
  fileSystems."/home" = {
    device = "zpool/home";
    fsType = "zfs";
    options = [ "zfsutil" ];
  };


OpenZFS document for NixOS Root on ZFS is also available:
  fileSystems."/boot" = {
https://openzfs.github.io/openzfs-docs/Getting%20Started/NixOS/Root%20on%20ZFS.html
  device = "/dev/disk/by-partlabel/boot";
  fsType = "vfat";
  };


This guide is based on the above OpenZFS guide and the NixOS installation instructions in the [https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/index.html#sec-installation NixOS manual].
  swapDevices = [{
 
    device = "/dev/disk/by-partlabel/swap";
=== Pool layout considerations ===
    randomEncryption = true;
 
  }];
it is important to keep <code>/nix</code> and the rest of the filesystem in
}
different sections of the dataset hierarchy, like this:
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="text">
rpool/
      nixos/
            nix        mounted to /nix
      userdata/
            root        mounted to /
            home        mounted to /home
            ...
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


the name of <code>nixos</code> and <code>userdata/</code> can change, but them being peers is important.
== Importing on boot ==


ZFS can take consistent and atomic snapshots recursively down a dataset's hierarchy. Since Nix is good at being Nix, most users will want their server's ''data'' backed up, and don't mind reinstalling NixOS and then restoring data. If this is sufficient, only snapshot and back up the <code>userdata</code> hierarchy. Users who want to be able to restore a service with only ZFS snapshots will want to snapshot the entire tree, at the significant expense of snapshotting the Nix store.
If you create a zpool, it will not be imported on the next boot unless you either add the zpool name to <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>boot.zfs.extraPools</syntaxhighlight>:


=== Dataset properties ===
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
 
## In /etc/nixos/configuration.nix:
The following is a list of recommended dataset properties which have no drawbacks under regular uses:
boot.zfs.extraPools = [ "zpool_name" ];
 
* <code>compression=lz4</code> (<code>zstd</code> for higher-end machines)
* <code>xattr=sa</code> for Journald
* <code>acltype=posixacl</code> also for Journald
* <code>relatime=on</code> for reduced stress on SSDs
 
The following is a list of dataset properties which are often useful, but do have drawbacks:
 
* <code>atime=off</code> disables if a file's access time is updated when the file is read. This can result in significant performance gains, but might confuse some software like mailers.
 
==== Journald ====
 
Journald requires some properties for <code>journalctl</code> to work for non-root users. The dataset containing <code>/var/log/journal</code> (probably the <code>/</code> dataset for simple configurations) should be created with <code>xattr=sa</code> and <code>acltype=posixacl</code>.
 
For example:
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# zpool create  -O xattr=sa -O acltype=posixacl rpool ...
</syntaxhighlight>
 
or:
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# zfs create -o xattr=sa -o acltype=posixacl rpool/root
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


If you have already created the dataset, these properties can be set later:
or if you are using legacy mountpoints, add a <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>fileSystems</syntaxhighlight> entry and NixOS will automatically detect that the pool needs to be imported:


<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
# zfs set xattr=sa acltype=posixacl rpool/root
## In /etc/nixos/configuration.nix:
fileSystems."/mount/point" = {
  device = "zpool_name";
  fsType = "zfs";
};
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Environment setup ===
=== Zpool created with bus-based disk names ===
For convenience set a shell variable with the paths to your disk(s):
If you used bus-based disk names in the <syntaxhighlight inline>zpool create</syntaxhighlight> command, e.g., <syntaxhighlight inline>/dev/sda</syntaxhighlight>, NixOS may run into issues importing the pool if the names change. Even if the pool is able to be mounted (with <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>boot.zfs.devNodes = "/dev/disk/by-partuuid";</syntaxhighlight> set), this may manifest as a <syntaxhighlight inline>FAULTED</syntaxhighlight> disk and a <syntaxhighlight inline>DEGRADED</syntaxhighlight> pool reported by <syntaxhighlight inline>zpool status</syntaxhighlight>. The fix is to re-import the pool using disk IDs:
 
For multiple disks:
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
$ disk=(/dev/disk/by-id/foo /dev/disk/by-id/bar)
</syntaxhighlight>


For a single disk:
<syntaxhighlight>
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# zpool export zpool_name
$ disk=/dev/disk/by-id/foo
# zpool import -d /dev/disk/by-id zpool_name
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Partitioning the disks ===
The import setting is reflected in <syntaxhighlight inline="" lang="bash">/etc/zfs/zpool.cache</syntaxhighlight>, so it should persist through subsequent boots.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
# Multiple disks
for x in "${disk[@]}"; do
  sudo parted "$x" -- mklabel gpt
  sudo parted "$x" -- mkpart primary 512MiB -8GiB
  sudo parted "$x" -- mkpart primary linux-swap -8GiB 100%
  sudo parted "$x" -- mkpart ESP fat32 1MiB 512MiB
  sudo parted "$x" -- set 3 esp on


  sudo mkswap -L swap "${x}-part2"
=== Zpool created with disk IDs ===
  sudo mkfs.fat -F 32 -n EFI "${x}-part3"
If you used disk IDs to refer to disks in the <code>zpool create</code> command, e.g., <code>/dev/disk/by-id</code>, then NixOS may consistently fail to import the pool unless <code>boot.zfs.devNodes = "/dev/disk/by-id"</code> is also set.
done


# Single disk
== Mount datasets at boot ==
sudo parted "$disk" -- mklabel gpt
zfs-mount service is enabled by default on NixOS 22.05.
sudo parted "$disk" -- mkpart primary 512MiB -8GiB
sudo parted "$disk" -- mkpart primary linux-swap -8GiB 100%
sudo parted "$disk" -- mkpart ESP fat32 1MiB 512MiB
sudo parted "$disk" -- set 3 esp on


sudo mkswap -L swap "${disk}-part2"
To automatically mount a dataset at boot, you only need to set <code>canmount=on</code> and <code>mountpoint=/mount/point</code> on the respective datasets.
sudo mkfs.fat -F 32 -n EFI "${disk}-part3"
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Laying out the filesystem hierarchy ===
== Changing the Adaptive Replacement Cache size ==
In this guide, we will be using a <code>tmpfs</code> for <code>/</code>, since no system state will be stored outside of the ZFS datasets we will create.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
sudo mount -t tmpfs none /mnt
</syntaxhighlight>


==== Create the ZFS pool ====
To change the maximum size of the ARC to (for example) 12 GB, add this to your NixOS configuration:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
sudo zpool create \
boot.kernelParams = [ "zfs.zfs_arc_max=12884901888" ];
  -o ashift=12 \
  -o autotrim=on \
  -R /mnt \
  -O canmount=off \
  -O mountpoint=none \
  -O acltype=posixacl \
  -O compression=zstd \
  -O dnodesize=auto \
  -O normalization=formD \
  -O relatime=on \
  -O xattr=sa \
  -O encryption=aes-256-gcm \
  -O keylocation=prompt \
  -O keyformat=passphrase \
  rpool \
  mirror \
  "${disk[@]/%/-part1}"
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


For a single disk, remove <code>mirror</code> and specify just <code>"${disk}-part1"</code> as the device.
== Tuning other parameters ==


If you do not want the entire pool to be encrypted, remove the options <code>encryption</code> <code>keylocation</code> and <code>keyformat</code>.
To tune other attributes of ARC, L2ARC or of ZFS itself via runtime modprobe config, add this to your NixOS configuration (keys and values are examples only!):
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
==== Create the ZFS datasets ====
    boot.extraModprobeConfig = ''
Since zfs is a copy-on-write filesystem even for deleting files disk space is needed. Therefore it should be avoided to run out of disk space. Luckily it is possible to reserve disk space for datasets to prevent this.
      options zfs l2arc_noprefetch=0 l2arc_write_boost=33554432 l2arc_write_max=16777216 zfs_arc_max=2147483648
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
    '';
# zfs create -o refreservation=1G -o mountpoint=none rpool/reserved
</syntaxhighlight>
 
Create the datasets for the operating system.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
sudo zfs create -o canmount=off -o mountpoint=/ rpool/nixos
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on rpool/nixos/nix
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on rpool/nixos/etc
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on rpool/nixos/var
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on rpool/nixos/var/lib
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on rpool/nixos/var/log
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on rpool/nixos/var/spool
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


Create datasets for user home directories.  If you opted to not encrypt the entire pool, you can encrypt just the userdata by specifying the same ZFS properties when creating rpool/userdata, and the child datasets will also be encrypted.
You can confirm whether any specified configuration/tuning got applied via commands like <code>arc_summary</code> and <code>arcstat -a -s " "</code>.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
sudo zfs create -o canmount=off -o mountpoint=/ rpool/userdata
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on rpool/userdata/home
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on -o mountpoint=/root rpool/userdata/home/root
# Create child datasets of home for users' home directories.
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on rpool/userdata/home/alice
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on rpool/userdata/home/bob
sudo zfs create -o canmount=on rpool/userdata/home/...
</syntaxhighlight>


==== Mount <code>/boot</code> ====
== Automatic scrubbing ==
We are going to use the default NixOS bootloader systemd-boot, which can install to only one device.  You will want to periodically rsync <code>/mnt/boot</code> to <code>/mnt/boot2</code> so that you can always boot your system if either disk fails.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
sudo mkdir /mnt/boot /mnt/boot2
sudo mount "${disk[0]}-part3" /mnt/boot
sudo mount "${disk[1]}-part3" /mnt/boot2
</syntaxhighlight>


Or for single-disk systems:
Regular scrubbing of ZFS pools is recommended and can be enabled in your NixOS configuration via:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
sudo mkdir /mnt/boot
sudo mount "${disk}-part3" /mnt/boot
</syntaxhighlight>
 
=== Configure the NixOS system ===
Generate the base NixOS configuration files.
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# nixos-generate-config --root /mnt
</syntaxhighlight>
 
Open <code>/mnt/etc/nixos/configuration.nix</code> in a text editor and change <code>imports</code> to include <code>hardware-configuration-zfs.nix</code> instead of the default <code>hardware-configuration.nix</code>.  We will be editing this file later.
 
Now Add the following block of code anywhere (how you organise your <code>configuration.nix</code> is up to you):
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
# ZFS boot settings.
boot.supportedFilesystems = [ "zfs" ];
boot.zfs.devNodes = "/dev/";
</syntaxhighlight>
 
Now set <code>networking.hostName</code> and <code>networking.hostId</code>.  The host ID must be an eight digit hexadecimal value.  You can derive it from the <code>/etc/machine-id</code>, taking the first eight characters; from the hostname, by taking the first eight characters of the hostname's md5sum,
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
$ hostname | md5sum | head -c 8
</syntaxhighlight>
or by taking eight hexadecimal characters from <code>/dev/urandom</code>,
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
$ tr -dc 0-9a-f < /dev/urandom | head -c 8
</syntaxhighlight>
 
Now add some ZFS maintenance settings:
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
# ZFS maintenance settings.
services.zfs.trim.enable = true;
services.zfs.autoScrub.enable = true;
services.zfs.autoScrub.enable = true;
services.zfs.autoScrub.pools = [ "rpool" ];
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


You may wish to also add <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>services.zfs.autoSnapshot.enable = true;</syntaxhighlight> and set the ZFS property <code>com.sun:auto-snapshot</code> to <code>true</code> on <code>rpool/userdata</code> to have automatic snapshots.  (See [[#How to use the auto-snapshotting service]] earlier on this page.)
You can tweak the interval (defaults to once a week) and which pools should be scrubbed (defaults to all).


Now open <code>/mnt/etc/nixos/hardware-configuration-zfs.nix</code>.


* Add <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>options = [ "zfsutil" ];</syntaxhighlight> to every ZFS <code>fileSystems</code> block.
== Remote unlock ==
* Add <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>options = [ "X-mount.mkdir" ];</syntaxhighlight> to <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>fileSystems."/boot"</syntaxhighlight> and <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>fileSystems."/boot2"</syntaxhighlight>.
=== Unlock encrypted zfs via ssh on boot ===
* Replace <code>swapDevices</code> with the following, replacing <code>DISK1</code> and <code>DISK2</code> with the names of your disks.


<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
{{note|As of 22.05, rebuilding your config with the below directions may result in a situation where, if you want to revert the changes, you may need to do some pretty hairy nix-store manipulation to be able to successfully rebuild, see https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/101462#issuecomment-1172926129}}
swapDevices = [
  { device = "/dev/disk/by-id/foo-part2";
    randomEncryption = true;
  }
  { device = "/dev/disk/by-id/bar-part2";
    randomEncryption = true;
  }
];
</syntaxhighlight>
For single-disk installs, remove the second entry of this array.


==== Optional additional setup for encrypted ZFS ====
===== Unlock encrypted zfs via ssh on boot =====
In case you want unlock a machine remotely (after an update), having an ssh service in initrd for the password prompt is handy:
In case you want unlock a machine remotely (after an update), having an ssh service in initrd for the password prompt is handy:


Line 431: Line 278:
       authorizedKeys = [ "ssh-rsa AAAA..." ];
       authorizedKeys = [ "ssh-rsa AAAA..." ];
     };
     };
    # this will automatically load the zfs password prompt on login
    # and kill the other prompt so boot can continue
    postCommands = ''
      cat <<EOF > /root/.profile
      if pgrep -x "zfs" > /dev/null
      then
        zfs load-key -a
        killall zfs
      else
        echo "zfs not running -- maybe the pool is taking some time to load for some unforseen reason."
      fi
      EOF
    '';
   };
   };
};
};
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
* In order to use DHCP in the initrd, network manager must not be enabled and <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>networking.useDHCP = true;</syntaxhighlight> must be set.
* In order to use DHCP in the initrd, network manager must not be enabled and <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>networking.useDHCP = true;</syntaxhighlight> must be set.
* If your network card isn't started, you'll need to add the according kernel module to the initrd as well, e.g. <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>boot.initrd.kernelModules = [ "r8169" ];</syntaxhighlight>
* If your network card isn't started, you'll need to add the according kernel module to the kernel and initrd as well, e.g. <syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
boot.kernelModules = [ "r8169" ];
boot.initrd.kernelModules = [ "r8169" ];</syntaxhighlight>


===== Import and unlock multiple encrypted pools/dataset at boot =====
After that you can unlock your datasets using the following ssh command:
If you have not only one encrypted pool/dataset but multiple ones and you want to import and unlock them at boot, so that they can be automounted using the hardware-configuration.nix, you could just amend the <code>boot.initrd.network.postCommands</code> option.


Unfortunately having an unlock key file stored in an encrypted zfs dataset cannot be used directly, so the pool must use <code>keyformat=passphrase</code> and <code>keylocation=prompt</code>.
<syntaxhighlight>
ssh -p 2222 root@host "zpool import -a; zfs load-key -a && killall zfs"
</syntaxhighlight>


The following example follows the remote unlocking with OpenSSH, but imports another pool also and prompts for unlocking (either when at the machine itself or when logging in remotely:
Alternatively you could also add the commands as postCommands to your configuration.nix, then you just have to ssh into the initrd:


<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
<syntaxhighlight>
boot = {
boot = {
   initrd.network = {
   initrd.network = {
    enable = true;
    ssh = {
      enable = true;
      port = 2222;
      hostKeys = [ /path/to/ssh_host_rsa_key ];
      authorizedKeys = [ "ssh-rsa AAAA..." ];
    };
     postCommands = ''
     postCommands = ''
      zpool import tankXXX
    # Import all pools
      echo "zfs load-key -a; killall zfs" >> /root/.profile
    zpool import -a
    # Or import selected pools
    zpool import pool2
    zpool import pool3
    zpool import pool4
    # Add the load-key command to the .profile
    echo "zfs load-key -a; killall zfs" >> /root/.profile
     '';
     '';
   };
   };
Line 475: Line 311:
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


When you login by SSH into the box or when you have physical access to the machine itself, you will be prompted to supply the unlocking password for your zroot and tankXXX pools.
After that you can unlock your datasets using the following ssh command:


=== Install NixOS ===
<syntaxhighlight>
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
ssh -p 2222 root@host
# nixos-install --show-trace --root /mnt
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
<code>--show-trace</code> will show you where exactly things went wrong if <code>nixos-install</code> fails.  To take advantage of all cores on your system, also specify <code>--max-jobs n</code> replacing <code>n</code> with the number of cores on your machine.


== ZFS trim support for SSDs ==
== Reservations ==
 
On ZFS, the performance will deteriorate significantly when more than 80% of the available space is used.  To avoid this, reserve disk space beforehand.
 
To reserve space create a new unused dataset that gets a guaranteed disk space of 10GB.


ZFS 0.8 now also features trim support for SSDs.
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# zfs create -o refreservation=10G -o mountpoint=none zroot/reserved
</syntaxhighlight>


=== How to use ZFS trimming ===
== Auto ZFS trimming ==


ZFS trimming works on one or more zpools and will trim each ssd inside it. There are two modes of it. One mode will manually trim the specified pool and the other will auto-trim pools. However the main difference is, that auto-trim will skip ranges that it considers too small while manually issued trim will trim all ranges.
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>services.zfs.trim.enable = true;</syntaxhighlight>.


To manually start trimming of a zpool run: <code>zpool trim tank</code>.
This will periodically run <code>zpool trim</code>. Note that this is different from the <code>autotrim</code> pool property. For further information, see the <code>zpool-trim</code> and <code>zpoolprops</code> man pages.
Since [https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/65331 PR-65331] this can be also done periodically (by default once a week) by setting <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>services.zfs.trim.enable = true;</syntaxhighlight>.


To set a pool for auto-trim run: <code>zpool set autotrim=on tank</code>
== Take snapshots automatically ==


To check the status of the manual trim, you can just run <code>zpool status -t</code>
See <code>services.sanoid</code> section in <code>man configuration.nix</code>.


To see the effects of trimming, you can run <code>zpool iostat -r</code> and <code>zpool iostat -w</code>
== NFS share ==


To see whether auto-trimming works, just run <code>zpool iostat -r</code> note the results and run it later again. The trim entries should change.
With <code>sharenfs</code> property, ZFS has build-in support for generating <code>/etc/exports.d/zfs.exports</code> file, which in turn is processed by NFS service automatically.


For further information read the [https://github.com/zfsonlinux/zfs/pull/8419 PR description].
{{warning|If you are intending on defining an IPv6 subnet as part of your sharenfs rule, as of ZFS 2.0.6 (2021-09-23) please note that due to a bug in openzfs '''your rule will not correctly apply''', and may result in a security vulnerability (CVE-2013-20001). A fix has been implemented in the next yet-to-be-released upstream version - [https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/pull/11939 openzfs/zfs#11939]}}


[[Category:Guide]]
To enable NFS share on a dataset, only two steps are needed:


First, enable [[NFS|NFS service]]:
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
services.nfs.server.enable = true;
</syntaxhighlight>
Only this line is needed. Configure firewall if necessary, as described in [[NFS]] article.


Following are a few discourse posts on zfs, serving as pointers, form your own opinion
Then, set <code>sharenfs</code> property:
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# zfs set sharenfs="ro=192.168.1.0/24,all_squash,anonuid=70,anongid=70" rpool/myData
</syntaxhighlight>
For more options, see <code>man 5 exports</code>.


* https://discourse.nixos.org/t/zfs-dedup-on-nix-store-is-it-worth-it/4959
Todo: sharesmb property for Samba.
* https://discourse.nixos.org/t/how-to-add-extra-build-input-to-linux-kernel/8208/3


== Mail notification for ZFS Event Daemon ==
== Mail notification for ZFS Event Daemon ==
Line 516: Line 363:
ZFS Event Daemon (zed) monitors events generated by the ZFS kernel module and runs configured tasks. It can be configured to send an email when a pool scrub is finished or a disk has failed. [https://search.nixos.org/options?query=services.zfs.zed zed options]
ZFS Event Daemon (zed) monitors events generated by the ZFS kernel module and runs configured tasks. It can be configured to send an email when a pool scrub is finished or a disk has failed. [https://search.nixos.org/options?query=services.zfs.zed zed options]


The <code>zfs</code> package must be built with mail features. The following override is needed as <code>zfs</code> is implicitly used in partition mounting:
=== Alternative 1: Enable Mail Notification without Re-compliation ===
 
First, we need to configure a mail transfer agent, the program that sends email:
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
{
  programs.msmtp = {
    enable = true;
    setSendmail = true;
    defaults = {
      aliases = "/etc/aliases";
      port = 465;
      tls_trust_file = "/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt";
      tls = "on";
      auth = "login";
      tls_starttls = "off";
    };
    accounts = {
      default = {
        host = "mail.example.com";
        passwordeval = "cat /etc/emailpass.txt";
        user = "user@example.com";
        from = "user@example.com";
      };
    };
  };
}
</syntaxhighlight>
 
Then, configure an alias for root account. With this alias configured, all mails sent to root, such as cron job results and failed sudo login events, will be redirected to the configured email account.
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
tee -a /etc/aliases <<EOF
root: user@example.com
EOF
</syntaxhighlight>
 
Finally, override default zed settings with a custom one:
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
{
  services.zfs.zed.settings = {
    ZED_DEBUG_LOG = "/tmp/zed.debug.log";
    ZED_EMAIL_ADDR = [ "root" ];
    ZED_EMAIL_PROG = "${pkgs.msmtp}/bin/msmtp";
    ZED_EMAIL_OPTS = "@ADDRESS@";
 
    ZED_NOTIFY_INTERVAL_SECS = 3600;
    ZED_NOTIFY_VERBOSE = true;
 
    ZED_USE_ENCLOSURE_LEDS = true;
    ZED_SCRUB_AFTER_RESILVER = true;
  };
  # this option does not work; will return error
  services.zfs.zed.enableMail = false;
}
</syntaxhighlight>
 
You can now test this by performing a scrub
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# zpool scrub $pool
</syntaxhighlight>
 
=== Alternative 2: Rebuild ZFS with Mail Support ===
The <code>zfs</code> package can be rebuilt with mail features. However, please note that this will cause Nix to recompile the entire ZFS package on the computer, and on every kernel update, which could be very time-consuming on lower-end NAS systems.
 
An alternative solution that does not involve recompliation can be found above.
 
The following override is needed as <code>zfs</code> is implicitly used in partition mounting:


<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
Line 542: Line 455:
You can customize the mail command with <code>ZED_EMAIL_OPTS</code>. For example, if your upstream mail server requires a certain FROM address: <code>ZED_EMAIL_OPTS = "-r 'noreply@example.com' -s '@SUBJECT@' @ADDRESS@";</code>
You can customize the mail command with <code>ZED_EMAIL_OPTS</code>. For example, if your upstream mail server requires a certain FROM address: <code>ZED_EMAIL_OPTS = "-r 'noreply@example.com' -s '@SUBJECT@' @ADDRESS@";</code>


After a <code>sudo nixos-rebuild switch</code>, you can test ZED notifications by performing a scrub on an existing pool, or on a small test pool:
[[Category:Guide]]
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
$ cd /tmp
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=sparse_file bs=1 count=0 seek=512M
$ sudo zpool create test /tmp/sparse_file
$ sudo zpool scrub test
// Check for email when scrub is complete
// Cleanup
$ sudo zpool export test
$ rm sparse_file
</syntaxhighlight>
 
== Mount datasets without legacy mountpoint ==
Contrary to conventional wisdom, <code>mountpoint=legacy</code> is not required for mounting datasets. The trick is to use <code>mount -t zfs -o zfsutil path/to/dataset /path/to/mountpoint</code>.
 
Also, legacy mountpoints are also inconvenient in that the mounts can not be natively handled by <code>zfs mount</code> command, hence <code>legacy</code> in the name.
 
An example configuration of mounting non-legacy dataset is the following:
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
{
  fileSystems."/tank" =
    { device = "tank_pool/data";
      fsType = "zfs"; options = [ "zfsutil" ];
    };
}
</syntaxhighlight>
 
An alternative is to set <syntaxhighlight lang="nix" inline>boot.zfs.extraPools = [ pool_name ];</syntaxhighlight>, which is recommended by the documentation if you have many zfs filesystems.
 
== NFS share ==
With <code>sharenfs</code> property, ZFS has build-in support for generating <code>/etc/exports.d/zfs.exports</code> file, which in turn is processed by NFS service automatically.
 
{{warning|If you are intending on defining an IPv6 subnet as part of your sharenfs rule, as of ZFS 2.0.6 (2021-09-23) please note that due to a bug in openzfs '''your rule will not correctly apply''', and may result in a security vulnerability (CVE-2013-20001). A fix has been implemented in the next yet-to-be-released upstream version - [https://github.com/openzfs/zfs/pull/11939 openzfs/zfs#11939]}}
 
To enable NFS share on a dataset, only two steps are needed:
 
First, enable [[NFS|NFS service]]:
<syntaxhighlight lang="nix">
services.nfs.server.enable = true;
</syntaxhighlight>
Only this line is needed. Configure firewall if necessary, as described in [[NFS]] article.
 
Then, set <code>sharenfs</code> property:
<syntaxhighlight lang="console">
# zfs set sharenfs="ro=192.168.1.0/24,all_squash,anonuid=70,anongid=70" rpool/myData
</syntaxhighlight>
For more options, see <code>man 5 exports</code>.
 
== See also ==
 
This article on how to setup encrypted ZFS on Hetzner: <https://mazzo.li/posts/hetzner-zfs.html>.

Latest revision as of 23:48, 3 June 2024

ZFS (wikipedia:en:ZFS) - also known as OpenZFS (wikipedia:en:OpenZFS) - is a modern filesystem which is well supported on NixOS.

There are a lot of packages for ZFS. For example there is the zfs package (ZFS Filesystem Linux Kernel module) itself.[1] But there are also a lot of packages of the ZFS ecosystem available.

ZFS integrates into NixOS via its module system. Examples:

Limitations

latestCompatibleLinuxPackages of ZFS for boot.kernelPackages

Newest kernels might not be supported by ZFS yet. If you are running an newer kernel which is not yet officially supported by zfs, the zfs module will refuse to evaluate and show up as broken. Use boot.kernelPackages = config.boot.zfs.package.latestCompatibleLinuxPackages; to use the latest compatible kernel.

partial support for SWAP on ZFS

ZFS does not support swapfiles. SWAP devices must be used instead. Additionally, hibernation is disabled by default due to a high risk of data corruption. Note that even if / after that pull request is merged, it does not fully mitigate the risk. If you wish to enable hibernation regardless, set boot.zfs.allowHibernation = true.

boot.zfs.devNodes

If NixOS fails to import the zpool on reboot, you may need to add boot.zfs.devNodes = "/dev/disk/by-path"; or boot.zfs.devNodes = "/dev/disk/by-partuuid"; to your configuration.nix file.

The differences can be tested by running zpool import -d /dev/disk/by-id when none of the pools are discovered, eg. a live iso.

declarative mounting of ZFS datasets

When using legacy mountpoints (created with egzfs create -o mountpoint=legacy) mountpoints must be specified with fileSystems."/mount/point" = {};. ZFS native mountpoints are not managed as part of the system configuration but better support hibernation with a separate swap partition. This can lead to conflicts if ZFS mount service is also enabled for the same datasets. Disable it with systemd.services.zfs-mount.enable = false;.

Guides

OpenZFS Documentation for installing

Warning: This guide is not endorsed by NixOS and some features like immutable root do not have upstream support and could break on updates. If an issue arises while following this guide, please consult the guides support channels.

One guide for a NixOS installation with ZFS is maintained at OpenZFS Documentation (Getting Started for NixOS)

It is about:

It is not about:

  • Give understandable, easy to follow and close to the standard installation guide instructions
  • integrating ZFS into your existing config


Simple NixOS ZFS installation

Start from here in the NixOS manual: [1]. Under manual partitioning [2] do this instead:

Partition your disk with your favorite partition tool.

We need the following partitions:

  • 1G for boot partition with "boot" as the partition label (also called name in some tools) and ef00 as partition code
  • 10G for a swap partition with "swap" as the partition label and 8200 as partition code. We will encrypt this with a random secret on each boot.
  • The rest of disk space for zfs with "root" as the partition label and 8300 as partition code (default code)

Reason for swap partition: ZFS does use a caching mechanism that is different from the normal Linux cache infrastructure. In low-memory situations, ZFS therefore might need a bit longer to free up memory from its cache. The swap partition will help with that.

Example output from fdisk:

sudo gdisk /dev/nvme0n1
GPT fdisk (gdisk) version 1.0.9.1
...
Command (? for help): p
Disk /dev/nvme0n1: 500118192 sectors, 238.5 GiB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512/512 bytes
Disk identifier (GUID): CA926E8C-47F6-416A-AD1A-C2190CF5D1F8
Partition table holds up to 128 entries
Main partition table begins at sector 2 and ends at sector 33
First usable sector is 34, last usable sector is 500118158
Partitions will be aligned on 2048-sector boundaries
Total free space is 2669 sectors (1.3 MiB)

Number  Start (sector)    End (sector)  Size       Code  Name
   1            2048         2099199   1024.0 MiB  EF00  boot
   2         2099200        23070719   10.0 GiB    8200  swap
   3        23070720       500117503   227.5 GiB   8300  root

Command (? for help):

Make zfs pool with encryption and mount points:

Note: zpool config can significantly affect performance (especially the ashift option) so you may want to do some research. The ZFS tuning cheatsheet or ArchWiki is a good place to start.

zpool create -O encryption=on -O keyformat=passphrase -O keylocation=prompt -O compression=zstd -O mountpoint=none -O xattr=sa -O acltype=posixacl -o ashift=12 zpool /dev/nvme0n1p2

zfs create zpool/root
zfs create zpool/nix
zfs create zpool/var
zfs create zpool/home

mkdir -p /mnt
mount -t zfs zpool/root /mnt -o zfsutil
mkdir /mnt/nix /mnt/var /mnt/home

mount -t zfs zpool/nix /mnt/nix -o zfsutil
mount -t zfs zpool/var /mnt/var -o zfsutil
mount -t zfs zpool/home /mnt/home -o zfsutil

Output from zpool status:

zpool status
  pool: zpool
 state: ONLINE
...
config:

	NAME                               STATE     READ WRITE CKSUM
	zpool                              ONLINE       0     0     0
	  nvme-eui.0025384b21406566-part2  ONLINE       0     0     0

Make fat filesystem on boot partition

mkfs.fat -F 32 -n boot /dev/nvme0n1p1


Installation:

Install: [3]

Jump to "2. UEFI systems"

mkdir -p /mnt/boot
mount /dev/disk/by-partlabel/boot /mnt/boot

Jump to "4." ... /mnt/etc/nixos/configuration.nix ...

Continue from here and add this boot loader and filesystems config to your configuration.nix:

{
  # Boot loader config for configuration.nix:
  boot.loader.systemd-boot.enable = true;

  # for local disks that are not shared over the network, we don't need this to be random
  networking.hostId = "8425e349";

  fileSystems."/" = { 
    device = "zpool/root";
    fsType = "zfs";
    # the zfsutil option is needed when mounting zfs datasets without "legacy" mountpoints
    options = [ "zfsutil" ];
  };

  fileSystems."/nix" = { 
    device = "zpool/nix";
    fsType = "zfs";
    options = [ "zfsutil" ];
  };

  fileSystems."/var" = { 
    device = "zpool/var";
    fsType = "zfs";
    options = [ "zfsutil" ];
  };

  fileSystems."/home" = {
    device = "zpool/home";
    fsType = "zfs";
    options = [ "zfsutil" ];
  };

  fileSystems."/boot" = { 
   device = "/dev/disk/by-partlabel/boot";
   fsType = "vfat";
  };

  swapDevices = [{
    device = "/dev/disk/by-partlabel/swap";
    randomEncryption = true;
  }];
}

Importing on boot

If you create a zpool, it will not be imported on the next boot unless you either add the zpool name to boot.zfs.extraPools:

## In /etc/nixos/configuration.nix:
boot.zfs.extraPools = [ "zpool_name" ];

or if you are using legacy mountpoints, add a fileSystems entry and NixOS will automatically detect that the pool needs to be imported:

## In /etc/nixos/configuration.nix:
fileSystems."/mount/point" = {
  device = "zpool_name";
  fsType = "zfs";
};

Zpool created with bus-based disk names

If you used bus-based disk names in the zpool create command, e.g., /dev/sda, NixOS may run into issues importing the pool if the names change. Even if the pool is able to be mounted (with boot.zfs.devNodes = "/dev/disk/by-partuuid"; set), this may manifest as a FAULTED disk and a DEGRADED pool reported by zpool status. The fix is to re-import the pool using disk IDs:

# zpool export zpool_name
# zpool import -d /dev/disk/by-id zpool_name

The import setting is reflected in /etc/zfs/zpool.cache, so it should persist through subsequent boots.

Zpool created with disk IDs

If you used disk IDs to refer to disks in the zpool create command, e.g., /dev/disk/by-id, then NixOS may consistently fail to import the pool unless boot.zfs.devNodes = "/dev/disk/by-id" is also set.

Mount datasets at boot

zfs-mount service is enabled by default on NixOS 22.05.

To automatically mount a dataset at boot, you only need to set canmount=on and mountpoint=/mount/point on the respective datasets.

Changing the Adaptive Replacement Cache size

To change the maximum size of the ARC to (for example) 12 GB, add this to your NixOS configuration:

boot.kernelParams = [ "zfs.zfs_arc_max=12884901888" ];

Tuning other parameters

To tune other attributes of ARC, L2ARC or of ZFS itself via runtime modprobe config, add this to your NixOS configuration (keys and values are examples only!):

    boot.extraModprobeConfig = ''
      options zfs l2arc_noprefetch=0 l2arc_write_boost=33554432 l2arc_write_max=16777216 zfs_arc_max=2147483648
    '';

You can confirm whether any specified configuration/tuning got applied via commands like arc_summary and arcstat -a -s " ".

Automatic scrubbing

Regular scrubbing of ZFS pools is recommended and can be enabled in your NixOS configuration via:

services.zfs.autoScrub.enable = true;

You can tweak the interval (defaults to once a week) and which pools should be scrubbed (defaults to all).


Remote unlock

Unlock encrypted zfs via ssh on boot

Note: As of 22.05, rebuilding your config with the below directions may result in a situation where, if you want to revert the changes, you may need to do some pretty hairy nix-store manipulation to be able to successfully rebuild, see https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/issues/101462#issuecomment-1172926129

In case you want unlock a machine remotely (after an update), having an ssh service in initrd for the password prompt is handy:

boot = {
  initrd.network = {
    # This will use udhcp to get an ip address.
    # Make sure you have added the kernel module for your network driver to `boot.initrd.availableKernelModules`, 
    # so your initrd can load it!
    # Static ip addresses might be configured using the ip argument in kernel command line:
    # https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/nfs/nfsroot.txt
    enable = true;
    ssh = {
      enable = true;
      # To prevent ssh clients from freaking out because a different host key is used,
      # a different port for ssh is useful (assuming the same host has also a regular sshd running)
      port = 2222; 
      # hostKeys paths must be unquoted strings, otherwise you'll run into issues with boot.initrd.secrets
      # the keys are copied to initrd from the path specified; multiple keys can be set
      # you can generate any number of host keys using 
      # `ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -N "" -f /path/to/ssh_host_ed25519_key`
      hostKeys = [ /path/to/ssh_host_rsa_key ];
      # public ssh key used for login
      authorizedKeys = [ "ssh-rsa AAAA..." ];
    };
  };
};
  • In order to use DHCP in the initrd, network manager must not be enabled and networking.useDHCP = true; must be set.
  • If your network card isn't started, you'll need to add the according kernel module to the kernel and initrd as well, e.g.
    boot.kernelModules = [ "r8169" ];
    boot.initrd.kernelModules = [ "r8169" ];
    

After that you can unlock your datasets using the following ssh command:

ssh -p 2222 root@host "zpool import -a; zfs load-key -a && killall zfs"

Alternatively you could also add the commands as postCommands to your configuration.nix, then you just have to ssh into the initrd:

boot = {
  initrd.network = {
    postCommands = ''
    # Import all pools
    zpool import -a
    # Or import selected pools
    zpool import pool2
    zpool import pool3
    zpool import pool4
    # Add the load-key command to the .profile
    echo "zfs load-key -a; killall zfs" >> /root/.profile
    '';
  };
};

After that you can unlock your datasets using the following ssh command:

ssh -p 2222 root@host

Reservations

On ZFS, the performance will deteriorate significantly when more than 80% of the available space is used. To avoid this, reserve disk space beforehand.

To reserve space create a new unused dataset that gets a guaranteed disk space of 10GB.

# zfs create -o refreservation=10G -o mountpoint=none zroot/reserved

Auto ZFS trimming

services.zfs.trim.enable = true;.

This will periodically run zpool trim. Note that this is different from the autotrim pool property. For further information, see the zpool-trim and zpoolprops man pages.

Take snapshots automatically

See services.sanoid section in man configuration.nix.

NFS share

With sharenfs property, ZFS has build-in support for generating /etc/exports.d/zfs.exports file, which in turn is processed by NFS service automatically.

Warning: If you are intending on defining an IPv6 subnet as part of your sharenfs rule, as of ZFS 2.0.6 (2021-09-23) please note that due to a bug in openzfs your rule will not correctly apply, and may result in a security vulnerability (CVE-2013-20001). A fix has been implemented in the next yet-to-be-released upstream version - openzfs/zfs#11939

To enable NFS share on a dataset, only two steps are needed:

First, enable NFS service:

services.nfs.server.enable = true;

Only this line is needed. Configure firewall if necessary, as described in NFS article.

Then, set sharenfs property:

# zfs set sharenfs="ro=192.168.1.0/24,all_squash,anonuid=70,anongid=70" rpool/myData

For more options, see man 5 exports.

Todo: sharesmb property for Samba.

Mail notification for ZFS Event Daemon

ZFS Event Daemon (zed) monitors events generated by the ZFS kernel module and runs configured tasks. It can be configured to send an email when a pool scrub is finished or a disk has failed. zed options

Alternative 1: Enable Mail Notification without Re-compliation

First, we need to configure a mail transfer agent, the program that sends email:

{
  programs.msmtp = {
    enable = true;
    setSendmail = true;
    defaults = {
      aliases = "/etc/aliases";
      port = 465;
      tls_trust_file = "/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt";
      tls = "on";
      auth = "login";
      tls_starttls = "off";
    };
    accounts = {
      default = {
        host = "mail.example.com";
        passwordeval = "cat /etc/emailpass.txt";
        user = "user@example.com";
        from = "user@example.com";
      };
    };
  };
}

Then, configure an alias for root account. With this alias configured, all mails sent to root, such as cron job results and failed sudo login events, will be redirected to the configured email account.

tee -a /etc/aliases <<EOF
root: user@example.com
EOF

Finally, override default zed settings with a custom one:

{
  services.zfs.zed.settings = {
    ZED_DEBUG_LOG = "/tmp/zed.debug.log";
    ZED_EMAIL_ADDR = [ "root" ];
    ZED_EMAIL_PROG = "${pkgs.msmtp}/bin/msmtp";
    ZED_EMAIL_OPTS = "@ADDRESS@";

    ZED_NOTIFY_INTERVAL_SECS = 3600;
    ZED_NOTIFY_VERBOSE = true;

    ZED_USE_ENCLOSURE_LEDS = true;
    ZED_SCRUB_AFTER_RESILVER = true;
  };
  # this option does not work; will return error
  services.zfs.zed.enableMail = false;
}

You can now test this by performing a scrub

# zpool scrub $pool

Alternative 2: Rebuild ZFS with Mail Support

The zfs package can be rebuilt with mail features. However, please note that this will cause Nix to recompile the entire ZFS package on the computer, and on every kernel update, which could be very time-consuming on lower-end NAS systems.

An alternative solution that does not involve recompliation can be found above.

The following override is needed as zfs is implicitly used in partition mounting:

nixpkgs.config.packageOverrides = pkgs: {
  zfsStable = pkgs.zfsStable.override { enableMail = true; };
};

A mail sender like msmtp or postfix is required.

A minimal, testable ZED configuration example:

services.zfs.zed.enableMail = true;
services.zfs.zed.settings = {
  ZED_EMAIL_ADDR = [ "root" ];
  ZED_NOTIFY_VERBOSE = true;
};

Above, ZED_EMAIL_ADDR is set to root, which most people will have an alias for in their mailer. You can change it to directly mail you: ZED_EMAIL_ADDR = [ "you@example.com" ];

ZED pulls in mailutils and runs mail by default, but you can override it with ZED_EMAIL_PROG. If using msmtp, you may need ZED_EMAIL_PROG = "${pkgs.msmtp}/bin/msmtp";.

You can customize the mail command with ZED_EMAIL_OPTS. For example, if your upstream mail server requires a certain FROM address: ZED_EMAIL_OPTS = "-r 'noreply@example.com' -s '@SUBJECT@' @ADDRESS@";