NixOS as a desktop: Difference between revisions
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NixOS can be used for many purposes. If you want to use it as a primary desktop operating system for your daily use (either on bare metal or as a [https://twitter.com/mitchellh/status/1346136404682625024 secondary VM]), this page is for you. Even if | NixOS can be used for many purposes. If you want to use it as a primary desktop operating system for your daily use (either on bare metal or as a [https://twitter.com/mitchellh/status/1346136404682625024 secondary VM]), this page is for you. Even if you're ambitions to use NixOS in the cloud or on specially configured servers, you may want to start with the lessons outlined here in order to get more generally familiar with the Nix ecosystem. | ||
== Installation == | == Installation == |
Revision as of 07:37, 6 July 2023
NixOS can be used for many purposes. If you want to use it as a primary desktop operating system for your daily use (either on bare metal or as a secondary VM), this page is for you. Even if you're ambitions to use NixOS in the cloud or on specially configured servers, you may want to start with the lessons outlined here in order to get more generally familiar with the Nix ecosystem.
Installation
Wiki method
If you prefer reading, see NixOS Installation Guide to get started. For a well presented video option, see video guide section immediately below. Keep in mind that, for a desktop installation, you will probably want to make sure you start with at least 30 GiB of available disk space to allow for the desktop environments (e.g. GNOME, KDE, or XFCE), browsers (e.g. Firefox), and other graphical applications (e.g. VSCode) that would be typical of daily use. 15 GiB might be enough in a pinch for a fairly bare-bones setup.
Video guide
For a visual guide, see Wil T Nix Guides. The second video is a concise installation guide. This 8-part series, produced in early 2021, also covers all the basics of using NixOS as a desktop and configuring it to your liking.
Managing your configuration
It is possible to manage your entire configuration using the methods documented in the NixOS official manual. However, most community members who use NixOS on the desktop prefer to manage their user configurations (e.g. "dotfiles") using Home Manager (citation needed). Home Manager is a user oriented tool for declaring what you want installed and how you want it configured, and thus would be used in lieu of most settings you would otherwise put into a configuration.nix or through nix-env
Video guide
Wil T's guides are about an even mix of:
- Hands-on bootstrapping to get to being able to very capably manage your system using Home Manager, git versioning, and eventually Flakes.
- Conceptual overviews and general exposition of the Nix ecosystem, community, and available resources.
The second video, starting from about 27 minutes in, is also an introduction to and guide to setting up Home Manager.
Modularizing your configuration
If you want a more composable NixOS configuration setup, the still-experimental Flakes feature is causing a lot of excitement in the community. Managing flakes requires a good basic understanding and some existing hands on experience with the Nix ecosystem.
Video guide
Videos seven and eight of Wil T's original 8-part series are a good overview of what Flakes enable and how to get started with them.
Beyond initial setup
After you are familiar with the Nix ecosystem and have a functional desktop install of NixOS, you will likely be interested in customizations and more detailed setup.
Learn by example
If you are comfortable managing your system through a git repo using flakes, then there are many repositories you can learn from now!
Check out Comparison of NixOS setups for a table comparing some popular choices.
See Configuration Collection for a long list within the wiki.
Additionally, the following topic searches on Github should uncover many useful examples.