Impermanence: Difference between revisions
imported>KREYREN m Persisting - Update the example |
Added a link to a blog post about how to set up impermanence with Btrfs. |
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{{warning|When setting up impermanence, make sure that you have declared password for your user to be able to log-in after the deployment as for example the nixos installer declares passwords imperatively.}} | |||
Impermanence in NixOS is where your root directory gets wiped every reboot (such as by mounting a tmpfs to /). Such a setup is possible because NixOS only needs <code>/boot</code> and <code>/nix</code> in order to boot, all other system files are simply links to files in <code>/nix</code>. <code>/boot</code> and <code>/nix</code> still need to be stored on a hard drive or SSD. | Impermanence in NixOS is where your root directory gets wiped every reboot (such as by mounting a tmpfs to /). Such a setup is possible because NixOS only needs <code>/boot</code> and <code>/nix</code> in order to boot, all other system files are simply links to files in <code>/nix</code>. <code>/boot</code> and <code>/nix</code> still need to be stored on a hard drive or SSD. | ||
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[https://grahamc.com/blog/erase-your-darlings https://grahamc.com/blog/erase-your-darlings] - Explaining why you might want to do this. Uses ZFS snapshots instead of tmpfs. | [https://grahamc.com/blog/erase-your-darlings https://grahamc.com/blog/erase-your-darlings] - Explaining why you might want to do this. Uses ZFS snapshots instead of tmpfs. | ||
https://mt-caret.github.io/blog/posts/2020-06-29-optin-state.html - Encypted Btrfs Root with Opt-in State on NixOS. Uses Btrfs instead of tmpfs or ZFS. |
Latest revision as of 02:04, 12 October 2024
Impermanence in NixOS is where your root directory gets wiped every reboot (such as by mounting a tmpfs to /). Such a setup is possible because NixOS only needs /boot
and /nix
in order to boot, all other system files are simply links to files in /nix
. /boot
and /nix
still need to be stored on a hard drive or SSD.
Example hardware-configuration.nix
settings:
fileSystems."/" =
{ device = "none";
fsType = "tmpfs";
options = [ "size=3G" "mode=755" ]; # mode=755 so only root can write to those files
};
fileSystems."/home/username" =
{ device = "none";
fsType = "tmpfs"; # Can be stored on normal drive or on tmpfs as well
options = [ "size=4G" "mode=777" ];
};
fileSystems."/nix" = # can be LUKS encrypted
{ device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/UUID";
fsType = "ext4";
};
fileSystems."/boot" =
{ device = "/dev/disk/by-uuid/UUID";
fsType = "vfat";
};
# Can mount any other partitions as well
Persisting
Some files and folders should be persisted between reboots though (such as /etc/nixos/
). This can be accomplished through bind mounts or by using the NixOS Impermanence module, which will set up bind mounts and links as needed.
Put in configuration.nix
:
{ config, pkgs, ... }:
let
impermanence = builtins.fetchTarball "https://github.com/nix-community/impermanence/archive/master.tar.gz";
in
{
imports = [ "${impermanence}/nixos.nix" ];
environment.persistence."/nix/persist/system" = {
hideMounts = true;
directories = [
"/var/log"
"/var/lib/bluetooth"
"/var/lib/nixos"
"/var/lib/systemd/coredump"
"/etc/NetworkManager/system-connections"
{ directory = "/var/lib/colord"; user = "colord"; group = "colord"; mode = "u=rwx,g=rx,o="; }
];
files = [
"/etc/machine-id"
{ file = "/etc/nix/id_rsa"; parentDirectory = { mode = "u=rwx,g=,o="; }; }
];
};
}
Home Managing
You can just make a home partition on a drive and mount it as normal, so everything in /home
or /home/username
will be persisted. If you want your home to be impermanent as well, then mount it on tmpfs the same way as root.
For persisting files in your home, you could simply use Home Manager like normal. However, then files are stored read-only in the Nix store. In order to persist files while still being writable, you can use the Home Manager Impermanence module. It will fuse mount folders and link files from persistent storage into your home directory.
Put in configuration.nix
:
{ config, pkgs, ... }:
let
home-manager = builtins.fetchTarball "https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/archive/release-22.05.tar.gz";
impermanence = builtins.fetchTarball "https://github.com/nix-community/impermanence/archive/master.tar.gz";
in
{
imports = [
(import "${home-manager}/nixos")
];
# might not be needed
programs.fuse.userAllowOther = true;
# Home Manager config goes in here
home-manager.users.<username> = {
home.homeDirectory = "/home/<username>";
imports = [ "${impermanence}/home-manager.nix" ];
programs = {
home-manager.enable = true;
git = { # can use home-manager normally as well as with persistence
enable = true;
userName = "Example";
userEmail = "Example@example.com";
};
};
home.persistence."/nix/dotfiles" = {
removePrefixDirectory = true; # for GNU Stow styled dotfile folders
allowOther = true;
directories = [
"Atom/.atom/atom-discord"
"Atom/.atom/packages"
"Clementine/.config/Clementine"
# fuse mounted from /nix/dotfiles/Firefox/.mozilla to /home/$USERNAME/.mozilla
"Firefox/.mozilla"
];
files = [
"Atom/.atom/config.cson"
"Atom/.atom/github.cson"
];
};
# fricking KDE Plasma has a bazillion files and each needs to be linked individually
# because they're all just shoved into ~/.config and not into a single folder.
# It's separate from the other dotfiles so I can write ".config"
# instead of "Plasma/.config"
home.persistence."/nix/dotfiles/Plasma" = {
removePrefixDirectory = false;
allowOther = true;
directories = [
".config/gtk-3.0" # fuse mounted from /nix/dotfiles/Plasma/.config/gtk-3.0
".config/gtk-4.0" # to /home/$USERNAME/.config/gtk-3.0
".config/KDE"
".config/kde.org"
".config/plasma-workspace"
".config/xsettingsd"
".kde"
".local/share/baloo"
".local/share/dolphin"
".local/share/kactivitymanagerd"
".local/share/kate"
".local/share/klipper"
".local/share/konsole"
".local/share/kscreen"
".local/share/kwalletd"
".local/share/kxmlgui5"
".local/share/RecentDocuments"
".local/share/sddm"
];
files = [
".config/akregatorrc"
".config/baloofileinformationrc"
".config/baloofilerc"
".config/bluedevilglobalrc"
".config/device_automounter_kcmrc"
".config/dolphinrc"
".config/filetypesrc"
".config/gtkrc"
".config/gtkrc-2.0"
".config/gwenviewrc"
".config/kactivitymanagerd-pluginsrc"
".config/kactivitymanagerd-statsrc"
".config/kactivitymanagerd-switcher"
".config/kactivitymanagerdrc"
".config/katemetainfos"
".config/katerc"
".config/kateschemarc"
".config/katevirc"
".config/kcmfonts"
".config/kcminputrc"
".config/kconf_updaterc"
".config/kded5rc"
".config/kdeglobals"
".config/kgammarc"
".config/kglobalshortcutsrc"
".config/khotkeysrc"
".config/kmixrc"
".config/konsolerc"
".config/kscreenlockerrc"
".config/ksmserverrc"
".config/ksplashrc"
".config/ktimezonedrc"
".config/kwinrc"
".config/kwinrulesrc"
".config/kxkbrc"
".config/mimeapps.list"
".config/partitionmanagerrc"
".config/plasma-localerc"
".config/plasma-nm"
".config/plasma-org.kde.plasma.desktop-appletsrc"
".config/plasmanotifyrc"
".config/plasmarc"
".config/plasmashellrc"
".config/PlasmaUserFeedback"
".config/plasmawindowed-appletsrc"
".config/plasmawindowedrc"
".config/powermanagementprofilesrc"
".config/spectaclerc"
".config/startkderc"
".config/systemsettingsrc"
".config/Trolltech.conf"
".config/user-dirs.dirs"
".config/user-dirs.locale"
".local/share/krunnerstaterc"
".local/share/user-places.xbel"
".local/share/user-places.xbel.bak"
".local/share/user-places.xbel.tbcache"
];
};
home.stateVersion = "21.11";
};
}
Troubleshooting
builder for '/nix/store/file-name.service.drv' failed to produce output path for output 'out' at '/nix/store/file-name.service'
This can happen if your NixOS version is later than your Home-Manager version (ex. NixOS 22.05 with Home-Manager 21.11). See https://github.com/nix-community/impermanence/issues/95.
See Also
https://elis.nu/blog/2020/06/nixos-tmpfs-as-home/ - Examples of using the NixOS modules
https://grahamc.com/blog/erase-your-darlings - Explaining why you might want to do this. Uses ZFS snapshots instead of tmpfs.
https://mt-caret.github.io/blog/posts/2020-06-29-optin-state.html - Encypted Btrfs Root with Opt-in State on NixOS. Uses Btrfs instead of tmpfs or ZFS.