Install NixOS on Hetzner Cloud
Installation
There are several ways to install NixOS, such as the 'traditional' ISO installation and nixos-infect.
traditional ISO
- Create a machine with any OS, such as Ubuntu
- Power it off
- Mount the available nixos 22.11-minimal ISO
- Power the machine back on
- Open the console (">_")
- Install NixOS as documented at https://nixos.org/manual/nixos/stable/index.html#sec-installation-manual (going for the "Legacy Boot (MBR)" variation)
- Power off the machine
- Unmount the iso
- Power on the machine
disko
TODO: it would be neat to document how to boot from the NixOS ISO and create the machine based on an online description including https://github.com/nix-community/disko specs - should be a quick way to set up bespoke 'throwaway' machines.
nixos-infect
Beside the manual installation, one way to setup NixOS is to replace an existing installation, for example the latest Ubuntu image, with nixos-infect. The installation process follows these steps:
- Boot into the existing operating system, preferably Ubuntu or Debian
- Login as root or with root permissions
- Deploy your SSH public key for the current root user. This key will be used later for authentication into the NixOS system.
- Run following script. Replace
NIX_CHANNEL
variable with the version string you wish to install.
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/elitak/nixos-infect/master/nixos-infect | NIX_CHANNEL=nixos-22.11 bash -x
- Reboot into NixOS
Declarative
TODO are any of the 'declarative' configuration management systems like NixOps or Terraform able to spin up Hetzner machines according to a particular configuration? If so then it would be nice to document this here :)
Network configuration
Hetzner Cloud offers both IPv4 (/32 subnet) and IPv6 (/64 subnet) connectivity to each machine. The assigned addresses can be looked up on the Hetzner Cloud Console from the "Networking" tab on the instance details. The public IPv4 address of the server can automatically obtained be via DHCP. For IPv6 you have to statically configure both address and gateway.
/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
systemd.network.enable = true;
systemd.network.networks."10-wan" = {
matchConfig.Name = "ens3"; # either ens3 (amd64) or enp1s0 (arm64)
networkConfig.DHCP = "ipv4";
address = [
# replace this address with the one assigned to your instance
"2a01:4f8:aaaa:bbbb::1/64"
];
routes = [
{ routeConfig.Gateway = "fe80::1"; }
];
};
Static IPv4 configuration
The IPv4 address can also be configured statically. The trick here is, that the gateway needs to be configured with the onlink
flag, because it is not in the same subnet as your public IP address, but still very much on that same link.
systemd.network.networks."10-wan" = {
networkConfig.DHCP = "no";
address = [
# replace this address with the one assigned to your instance
"A.B.C.D/32"
];
routes = [
{ routeConfig = { Destination = "172.31.1.1"; }; }
{ routeConfig = { Gateway = "172.31.1.1"; GatewayOnLink = true; }; }
];
}