Nixos-rebuild: Difference between revisions
imported>Raboof →Basic functionality: update error message, for better search engine matching |
added note, that all flake files need to be tracked by the repo to rebuild successfully |
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$ nixos-rebuild --target-host user@example.com --use-remote-sudo switch | $ nixos-rebuild --target-host user@example.com --use-remote-sudo switch | ||
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To enter a password while using remote sudo, prefix the command with <code>NIX_SSHOPTS="-o RequestTTY=force"</code>. | |||
{{Note|When rebuilding a remote host, you may see similar errors to the following: | {{Note|When rebuilding a remote host, you may see similar errors to the following: | ||
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# nixos-rebuild switch --flake /etc/nixos#hostname | # nixos-rebuild switch --flake /etc/nixos#hostname | ||
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{{Note|If your flake files are part of a Git repository, only tracked files are considered for building. Nix flakes deliberately ignores untracked files in the repository and do not copy them over to the Nix store. You need to stage untracked files first if they are relevant for your flake config. Otherwise, an error will be raised that the untracked file could not be found at the flake's Nix store path.}} | |||
===Internals=== | ===Internals=== |
Latest revision as of 10:29, 27 October 2024
nixos-rebuild is the NixOS command used to apply changes made to the system configuration. It can also be used for a variety of other tasks related to managing the state of a NixOS system.
Basic functionality
NixOS follows a "declarative configuration" approach, which means that the proper way to modify your system is to make changes to your system configuration (typically /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
), and then rebuild your system with nixos-rebuild
:
$ # Edit your configuration
$ sudo nano /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
$ # Rebuild your system
$ sudo nixos-rebuild switch
The switch
subcommand will rebuild your system, activate the new generation immediately and make it the default boot option. There are also a couple of other sub-commands available:
boot
: Build the configuration and make it the default boot option, but don't activate it until the next reboottest
: Build the configuration and activate it, but don't add it to the bootloader menubuild
: Build the configuration and place a symlink calledresult
pointing to the derivation in the Nix store in the current directorydry-activate
: Build the configuration, but do not activate it. Instead, show the changes that would be performed by activating the new generation.build-vm
: Build a QEMU VM that runs the new configuration. It leaves a symlink calledresult
in the current directory that contains the built VM. To run it, useresult/bin/run-<hostname>-vm
Useful options include:
--rollback
: Don't build the new configuration, but use the previous generation instead. Useful for quickly reverting erroneous changes, i. e.nixos-rebuild --rollback switch
--upgrade
: Update thenixos
channel of the root user before building the configuration.
nixos-rebuild
can also be used to build and deploy system configurations on remote hosts via SSH. To use a remote host to build your system and deploy it on the current host, use:
# nixos-rebuild --build-host user@example.com switch
To build the system locally and deploy it on a remote host, use:
$ nixos-rebuild --target-host user@example.com switch
Note that this will often require using a different configuration than the one in /etc/nixos
. See the Specifying a different configuration location section for details.
--build-host
and --target-host
can be used simultaneously, even with different hosts.
If you are rebuilding a remote host as a non-root user, use the --use-remote-sudo
option to elevate on the remote machine during the rebuilding process:
$ nixos-rebuild --target-host user@example.com --use-remote-sudo switch
To enter a password while using remote sudo, prefix the command with NIX_SSHOPTS="-o RequestTTY=force"
.
For a full list of sub-commands and options, see the nixos-rebuild
man page.
Specifying a different configuration location
without Flakes
By default, nixos-rebuild
builds the configuration in the file specified by the nixos-config
field in the NIX_PATH
environment variable, which is set to /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
by default. This can be overwritten with:
# nixos-rebuild switch -I nixos-config=path/to/configuration.nix
To permanently change the location of the configuration, modify the NIX_PATH
variable of your system with the nix.nixPath
config option:
{
nix.nixPath = [ "nixos-config=/path/to/configuration.nix" ];
}
with Flakes
nixos-rebuild
will look for the file /etc/nixos/flake.nix
by default and build the nixosConfigurations
item matching the current host name of the system. To specify a different flake directory, use:
# nixos-rebuild switch --flake path/to/flake/directory
To specify a different host name, use:
# nixos-rebuild switch --flake /etc/nixos#hostname
Internals
nixos-rebuild
is a Bash script that performs a relatively simple sequence of tasks. In the case of nixos-rebuild switch
, these are:
- Build the
config.system.build.toplevel
derivation of the current configuration. This can be manually done by:
$ # without Flakes
$ nix-build <nixpkgs/nixos> -A config.system.build.toplevel -I nixos-config=path/to/configuration.nix
$ # with Flakes
$ nix build /etc/nixos#nixosConfigurations.hostname.config.system.build.toplevel
- Add the resulting derivation to the system profile in
/nix/var/nix/profiles
, i. e. create a new generation in the system profile. - Add the new generation to the bootloader menu as the new default and activate it. If you've manually built the system derivation, this can also be done with
result/bin/switch-to-configuration switch
.