β Advisory β
DevOS requires the flakes feature available via an experimental branch of nix. Until nix 3.0 is released, this project should be considered unstable, though quite usable as flakes have been maturing well for a while.
Introduction
DevOS grants a simple way to use, deploy and manage NixOS systems for personal and productive use. A sane repository structure is provided, integrating several popular projects like home-manager, devshell, and more.
Stiving for nix firstβ’ solutions with unobstrusive implementations, a flake centric approach is taken for useful conveniences such as automatic source updates.
Skip the indeterminate nature of other systems, and the perceived tedium of bootstrapping Nix. It's easier than you think!
Status: Alpha
A lot of the implementation is less than perfect, and huge redesigns will happen. There are unstable versions (0.x.x) to help users keep track of changes and progress.
Getting Started
Check out the guide to get up and running.
In the Wild
The author maintains his own branch, so you can take inspiration, direction, or make critical comments about the code. π
Motivation
NixOS provides an amazing abstraction to manage our environment, but that new power can sometimes bring feelings of overwhelm and confusion. Having a turing complete system can easily lead to unlimited complexity if we do it wrong. Instead, we should have a community consensus on how to manage a NixOS system and its satellite projects, from which best practices can evolve.
The future is declarative! π
Upstream
I'd love to see this in the nix-community should anyone believe its reached a point of maturity to be generally useful, but I'm all for waiting until 1.0#121 to save the cache work, too.
Community Profiles
There are two branches from which to choose: core and community. The community branch builds on core and includes several ready-made profiles for discretionary use.
Every package and NixOS profile declared in community is uploaded to cachix, so everything provided is available without building anything. This is especially useful for the packages that are overridden from master, as without the cache, rebuilds are quite frequent.
Inspiration & Art
License
DevOS is licensed under the MIT License.
Quick Start
The only dependency is nix, so make sure you have it installed.
Get the Template
Here is a snippet that will get you the template without the git history:
nix-shell -p cachix --run "cachix use nrdxp"
nix-shell https://github.com/divnix/devos/archive/core.tar.gz -A shell \
--run "flk get core"
cd flk
nix-shell
git init
git add .
git commit -m init
This will place you in a new folder named flk
with git initialized, and a
nix-shell that provides all the dependencies, including the unstable nix
version required.
In addition, the binary cache is added for faster deployment.
Notes:
- You can change
core
tocommunity
in the call toflk get
- Flakes ignore files that have not been added to git, so be sure to stage new files before building the system.
- You can choose to simply clone the repo with git if you want to follow upstream changes.
Next Steps:
ISO
Making and writing an installable iso for hosts/NixOS.nix
is as simple as:
flk iso NixOS
dd bs=4M if=result/iso/*.iso of=/dev/$your_installation_device \
status=progress oflag=sync
This works for any file matching hosts/*.nix
excluding default.nix
.
ISO image nix store & cache
The iso image holds the store to the live environment and also acts as a binay cache
to the installer. To considerably speed up things, the image already includes all flake
inputs
as well as the devshell
closures.
While you could provision any machine with a single stick, a bespoke iso maximises those local cache hits.
For hosts that don't differ too much, a common usb stick might be ok, whereas when there are bigger differences, a bespoke usb stick will be considerably faster.
Bootstrapping
This will help you boostrap a bare host with the help of the bespoke iso live installer.
Note: nothing prevents you from remotely executing the boostrapping process. See below.
Once your target host has booted into the live iso, you need to partion and format your disk according to the official manual.
Mount partitions
Then properly mount the formatted partitions at /mnt
, so that you can
install your system to those new partitions.
Mount nixos
partition to /mnt
and β for UEFI β boot
partition to /mnt/boot
:
$ mount /dev/disk/by-label/nixos /mnt
$ mkdir -p /mnt/boot && mount /dev/disk/by-label/boot /mnt/boot # UEFI only
$ swapon /dev/$your_swap_partition
Install
Install using the flk
wrapper baked into the iso off of a copy of devos
from the time the iso was built:
$ cd /iso/devos
$ nix develop
$ flk install NixOS --impure # use same host as above
Notes of interest
Remote access to the live installer
The iso live installer comes preconfigured with a network configuration
which announces it's hostname via MulticastDNS as hostname.local
,
that is NixOS.local
in the iso example.
In the rare case that MulticastDNS is not availabe or turned off
in your network, there is a static link-local IPv6 address configured to
fe80::47
(mnemonic from the letter's position in the english alphabet:
n=14 i=9 x=24; 47 = n+i+x
).
Provided that you have added your public key to the authorized keys of the
root
user (hint: deploy-rs
needs passwordless
sudo access):
{ ... }:
{
users.users.root.openssh.authorizedKeys.keyFiles = [
../secrets/path/to/key.pub
];
}
You can then ssh into the live installer through one of the following options:
ssh root@NixOS.local
ssh root@fe80::47%eno1 # where eno1 is your network interface on which you are linked to the target
Note: the static link-local IPv6 address and MulticastDNS is only configured on the live installer. If you wish to enable MulticastDNS for your environment, you ought to configure that in a regular profile.
EUI-64 LLA & Host Identity
The iso's IPv6 Link Local Address (LLA) is configured with a static 64-bit Extended Unique Identifiers (EUI-64) that is derived from the host interface's Message Authentication Code (MAC) address.
After a little while (a few seconds), you can remotely discover this unique and host specific address over NDP for example with:
ip -6 neigh show # also shows fe80::47
This LLA is stable for the host, unless you need to swap that particular network card. Under this reservation, though, you may use this EUI-64 to wire up a specific (cryptographic) host identity.
From NixOS
Generate Configuration
Assuming your happy with your existing partition layout, you can generate a basic NixOS configuration for your system using:
flk up
This will make a new file hosts/up-$(hostname).nix
, which you can edit to
your liking.
Make sure your i18n.defaultLocale
and time.timeZone
are set properly for
your region. Keep in mind that networking.hostName
with be automatically
set to the filename of your hosts file, so hosts/my-host.nix
will have the
hostname my-host
.
Now might be a good time to read the docs on suites and profiles and add or create any that you need.
Note:
While the
up
sub-command is provided as a convenience to quickly set up and install a "fresh" NixOS system on current hardware, committing these files is discouraged.They are placed in the git staging area automatically because they would be invisible to the flake otherwise, but it is best to move what you need from them directly into a host module of your own making, and commit that instead.
Installation
Once your ready to deploy hosts/my-host.nix
:
flk my-host switch
This calls nixos-rebuild
with sudo to build and install your configuration.
Notes:
Instead of
switch
, you can passbuild
,test
,boot
, etc just as withnixos-rebuild
.It is convenient to have the template living at
/etc/nixos
so you can simplysudo nixos-rebuild switch
from anywhere on the system, but it is not required.
Layout
Each of the following sections is a directory in the root of the project serving a singular purpose. Select a chapter to read more about its purpose and usage.
Cachix
The cachix directory simple captures the output of sudo cachix use
for the
developers personal cache, as well as the nix-community cache. You can easily
add your own cache, assuming the template lives in /etc/nixos, by simply
running sudo cachix use yourcache
.
These caches are only added to the system after a nixos-rebuild switch
, so it
is recommended to call cachix use divnix
before the initial deployment, as it
will save a lot of build time.
In the future, users will be able to skip this step once the ability to define the nix.conf within the flake is fully fleshed out upstream.
External Art
When you need to use a module, overlay, or pass a value from one of your inputs to the rest of your NixOS configuration, extern is where you do it.
Modules and overlays are self explanatory, and the specialArgs
attribute is
used to extend the arguments passed to all NixOS modules, allowing for
arbitrary values to be passed from flake inputs to the rest of your
configuration.
Home Manager
There is also an hmModules
attribute set for pulling home-manager modules in
from the outside world:
Declare:
flake.nix:
{
inputs.doom-emacs.url = "github:vlaci/nix-doom-emacs";
}
extern/default.nix:
with inputs;
{
hmModules = {
doom-emacs = doom-emacs.hmModule;
};
}
Use:
users/nixos/default.nix:
{ hmModules, ... }:
{
home-manager.users.nixos = {
imports = [ hmModules.doom-emacs ] ;
programs.doom-emacs.enable = true;
};
}
Hosts
Nix flakes contain an output called nixosConfigurations
declaring an
attribute set of valid NixOS systems. To simplify the management and creation
of these hosts, devos automatically imports every .nix file inside this
directory to the mentioned attribute set, applying the projects defaults to
each. The only hard requirement is that the file contain a valid NixOS module.
As an example, a file hosts/system.nix
will be available via the flake
output nixosConfigurations.system
. You can have as many hosts as you want
and all of them will be automatically imported based on their name.
For each host, the configuration automatically sets the networking.hostName
attribute to the name of the file minus the .nix extension. This is for
convenience, since nixos-rebuild
automatically searches for a configuration
matching the current systems hostname if one is not specified explicitly.
It is recommended that the host modules only contain configuration information specific to a particular piece of hardware. Anything reusable across machines is best saved for profile modules.
This is a good place to import sets of profiles, called suites, that you intend to use on your machine.
Additionally, this is the perfect place to import anything you might need from the nixos-hardware repository.
Note:
Set
nixpkgs.system
to the architecture of this host, default is "x86_64-linux". Keep in mind that not all packages are available for all architectures.
Example
hosts/librem.nix:
{ suites, hardware, ... }:
{
imports = suites.laptop ++ [ hardware.purism-librem-13v3 ];
boot.loader.systemd-boot.enable = true;
boot.loader.efi.canTouchEfiVariables = true;
fileSystems."/" = { device = "/dev/disk/by-label/nixos"; };
}
Lib
The lib directory mirrors the upstream concepts of nixpkgs:./lib
,
nixpkgs:./nixos/lib
and nixpkgs:./pkgs/pkgs-lib
,
but also occasionally nixpkgs:./pkgs/build-support
.
It comes with functions necesary to declutter devos
itself, but you are
welcome to extend it to your needs.
For example:
-
you want to add a library function that depends on some packages and use it throughout your devos environment: place it into
./lib
as if you would place it intonixpkgs:./pkgs/pkgs-lib
. -
you want to add library functions that don't depend on
pkgs
: place them into./lib
as if you would place them intonixpkgs:./lib
. -
need to try out a newish custom build support: place it here before upstreaming into
nixpkgs:./pkgs/build-support
. -
you want to reutilize certain module configuration functions or helpers: place them into
./lib
as if you would place them intonixpkgs:./nixos/lib
.
Once your library grows, we recoomend you start organizing them into subfolders
analogous nixpkgs
:
nixpkgs | devos |
---|---|
./lib | ./lib |
./pkgs/pkgs-lib | ./lib/pkgs-lib |
./nixos/lib | ./lib/nixos-lib |
./pkgs/build-support | ./lib/pkgs-build |
Example
lib/nixos-lib/mkCustomI3BindSym/default.nix:
{ pkgs, writers, ... }:
{ name, cmd, workspace, baseKey }:
let
isWorkspaceEmpty = writers.writePython3 "is-workspace-empty" {
libraries = [ pkgs.python3Packages.i3ipc ];
} (builtins.readFile ./is-workspace-empty.py);
ws = builtins.toString workspace;
in
''
# ${name}
#bindsym ${baseKey}+${ws} workspace ${ws}; exec ${cmd}
bindsym ${baseKey}+${ws} workspace ${ws}; exec bash -c "${isWorkspaceEmpty} && ${cmd}"
''
lib/nixos-lib/mkCustomI3BindSym/is-workspace-empty.py:
# returns 0/1 if current workspace is empty/non-empty
import i3ipc
i3 = i3ipc.Connection()
tree = i3.get_tree()
def current_workspace():
return tree.find_focused().workspace()
if current_workspace().leaves():
print("Error current workspace is not empty")
exit(1)
exit(0)
lib/default.nix:
{ nixos, pkgs, ... }:
# ...
{
# ...
mkCustomI3BindSym = pkgs.callPackage ./nixos-lib/mkCustomI3BindSym { };
}
Modules
The modules directory is a replica of nixpkg's NixOS modules , and follows the same semantics. This allows for trivial upstreaming into nixpkgs proper once your module is sufficiently stable.
All modules linked in module-list.nix are automatically exported via
nixosModules.<file-basename>
, and imported into all hosts.
Note:
This is reserved for declaring brand new module options. If you just want to declare a coherent configuration of already existing and related NixOS options , use profiles instead.
Semantics
In case you've never written a module for nixpkgs before, here is a brief outline of the process.
Declaration
modules/services/service-category/my-service.nix:
{ config, lib, ... }:
let
cfg = config.services.myService;
in
{
options.services.myService = {
enable = lib.mkEnableOption "Description of my new service.";
# additional options ...
};
config = lib.mkIf cfg.enable {
# implementation ...
};
}
Import
modules/module-list.nix:
[
./services/service-category/my-service.nix
]
Usage
Internal
profiles/profile-category/my-profile.nix:
{ ... }:
{
services.MyService.enable = true;
}
External
flake.nix:
{
# inputs omitted
outputs = { self, devos, nixpkgs, ... }: {
nixosConfigurations.myConfig = nixpkgs.lib.nixosSystem {
system = "...";
modules = [
devos.nixosModules.my-service
({ ... }: {
services.MyService.enable = true;
})
];
};
};
}
Overlays
Writing overlays is a common occurence when using a NixOS system. Therefore, we want to keep the process as simple and straightforward as possible.
Any .nix files declared in this directory will be assumed to be a valid
overlay, and will be automatically imported into all hosts, and
exported via overlays.<file-basename>
as well as
packages.<system>.<pkgName>
(for valid systems), so all you have to do is
write it.
Example
overlays/kakoune.nix:
final: prev: {
kakoune = prev.kakoune.override {
configure.plugins = with final.kakounePlugins; [
(kak-fzf.override { fzf = final.skim; })
kak-auto-pairs
kak-buffers
kak-powerline
kak-vertical-selection
];
};
}
Overrides
By default, the NixOS systems are based on the latest release. While it is trivial to change this to nixos-unstable or any other branch of nixpkgs by changing the flake url, sometimes all we want is a single package from another branch.
This is what the overrides are for. By default, they are pulled directly from
nixpkgs/master, but you can change the override
flake input url to
nixos-unstable, or even a specific sha revision.
Example
Packages
The override packages are defined as a regular overlay with an extra arguement
pkgs
. This refers to the packages built from the override
flake.
Pulling the manix package from the override flake:
{
packages = pkgs: final: prev: {
inherit (pkgs) manix;
};
}
Modules
You can also pull modules from override. Simply specify their path relative to
the nixpkgs modules directory. The old version will be added
to disabledModules
and the new version imported into the configuration.
Pulling the zsh module from the override flake:
{
modules = [ "programs/zsh/zsh.nix" ];
}
Note:
Sometimes a modules name will change from one branch to another. This is what the
disabledModules
list is for. If the module name changes, the old version will not automatically be disabled, so simply put it's old name in this list to disable it.
Packages
Similar to modules, the pkgs directory mirrors the upstream nixpkgs/pkgs, and for the same reason; if you ever want to upstream your package, it's as simple as dropping it into the nixpkgs/pkgs directory.
The only minor difference is that, instead of adding the callPackage
call to
all-packages.nix
, you just add it the the default.nix in this directory,
which is defined as a simple overlay.
This overlay is set as the default overlay
output attribute for the flake.
And all the packages are exported via packages.<system>.<pkg-name>
, for all
the supported systems listed in the package's meta.platforms
attribute.
And, as usual, every package in the overlay is also available to any NixOS host.
Automatic Source Updates
There is the added, but optional, convenience of declaring your sources in
pkgs/flake.nix as an input. You can then access them from the srcs
package.
This allows updates to be managed automatically by simply
updating the lock file. No
more manually entering sha256 hashes!
As an added bonus, version strings are also generated automatically from either the flake ref, or the date and git revision of the source. For examples, definitely checkout the community branch.
Example
pkgs/development/libraries/libinih/default.nix:
{ stdenv, meson, ninja, lib, srcs, ... }:
let inherit (srcs) libinih; in
stdenv.mkDerivation {
pname = "libinih";
# version will resolve to 53, as specified in the final example below
inherit (libinih) version;
src = libinih;
buildInputs = [ meson ninja ];
# ...
}
pkgs/default.nix:
final: prev: {
libinih = prev.callPackage ./development/libraries/libinih { };
}
pkgs/flake.nix:
{
description = "Package sources";
inputs = {
libinih.url = "github:benhoyt/inih/r53";
libinih.flake = false;
};
}
Profiles
Profiles are a convenient shorthand for the definition of options in contrast to their declaration. They're built into the NixOS module system for a reason: to elegantly provide a clear separation of concerns.
If you need guidance, a community branch is maintained to help get up to speed on their usage.
Constraints
For the sake of consistency, a profile should always be defined in a default.nix containing a nixos module config. A profile's directory is used for quick modularization of interelated bits.
Notes:
- For declaring module options, there's the modules directory.
- This directory takes inspiration from upstream .
- Sticking to a simple spec has refreshing advantages. hercules-ci expects all profiles to be defined in a default.nix, allowing them to be built automatically when added. Congruently, suites expect default.nix to avoid having to manage their paths manually.
Subprofiles
Profiles can also define subprofiles. They follow the same constraints outlined above. A good top level profile should be a high level concern, such as your personal development environment while the subprofiles should be more focused program configurations such as your text editor, and shell configs. This way, you can either pull in the whole development profile, or pick and choose individual programs.
Example
profiles/develop/default.nix:
{
imports = [ ./zsh ];
# some generic development concerns ...
}
profiles/develop/zsh/default.nix:
{ ... }:
{
programs.zsh.enable = true;
# zsh specific options ...
}
Conclusion
Profiles are the most important concept in DevOS. They allow us to keep our Nix expressions self contained and modular. This way we can maximize reuse across hosts while minimizing boilerplate. Remember, anything machine specific belongs in your host files instead.
Secrets
Secrets are managed using git-crypt so you can keep your flake in a public repository like GitHub without exposing your password or other sensitive data.
By default, everything in the secrets folder is automatically encrypted. Just
be sure to run git-crypt init
before putting anything in here.
Note:
Currently, there is no mechanism in nix to deploy secrets within the nix/store so, if they end up in the nix/store after deployment, they will be world readable on that machine.
The author of devos intends to implement a workaround for this situation in the near future, but for the time being, simple be aware of this.
Suites
Suites provide a mechanism for users to easily combine and name collecitons of profiles. For good examples, check out the suites defined in the community branch.
In the future, we will use suites as a mechanism for deploying various machine types which don't depend on hardware, such as vm's and containers.
Definition
rec {
workstation = [ profiles.develop profiles.graphical users.nixos ];
mobileWS = workstation ++ [ profiles.laptop ];
}
Usage
hosts/my-laptop.nix
:
{ suites, ... }:
{
imports = suites.mobileWS;
}
Testing
Testing is always an important aspect of any software development project, and NixOS offers some incredibly powerful tools to write tests for your configuration, and, optionally, run them in CI.
Lib Tests
You can easily write tests for your own library functions in the
tests/lib.nix file and they will be run on every nix flake check
or
during a CI run.
Unit Tests
Unit tests are can be created from regular derivations, and they can do almost anything you can imagine. By convention, it is best to test your packages during their check phase. All packages and their tests will be built during CI.
Integration Tests
You can write integration tests for one or more NixOS VMs that can, optionally, be networked together, and yes, it's as awesome as it sounds!
Be sure to use the mkTest
function, in the tests/default.nix
which wraps the official testing-python function to ensure
that the system is setup exactly as it is for a bare DevOS system. There are
already great resources for learning how to use these tests effectively,
including the official docs, a fantastic blog post,
and the examples in nixpkgs.
Users
Users are a special case of profiles that define system users and home-manager configurations. For your convenience, home manager is wired in by default so all you have to worry about is declaring your users. For a fully fleshed out example, check out the developers personal branch.
Basic Usage
users/myuser/default.nix
:
{ ... }:
{
users.users.myuser = {
isNormalUser = true;
};
home-manager.users.myuser = {
programs.mpv.enable = true;
};
}
Home Manager
Home Manager support follows the same principles as regular nixos configurations.
All modules defined in user modules will be imported to
Home Manager. All profiles are availabe in suites as userProfiles.
The userSuites
output will be available in your Home Manager Configuration as
the special argument, suites
.
External Usage
You can easily use the defined home-manager configurations outside of NixOS
using the homeConfigurations
flake output. The flk helper
script makes this even easier.
This is great for keeping your environment consistent across Unix systems, including OSX.
From within the projects devshell:
# builds the nixos user defined in the NixOS host
flk home NixOS nixos
# build and activate
flk home NixOS nixos switch
Manually from outside the project:
# build
nix build "github:divnix/devos#homeConfigurations.nixos@NixOS.home.activationPackage"
# activate
./result/activate && unlink result
flk command
The devshell for the project incudes a convenient script for managing your
system called flk
. Each of the following chapters is a reference for one of
its subcommands.
Rebuild
Without any of the subcommands, flk
acts as a convenient shortcut for
nixos-rebuild
:
flk NixOS build
Will build hosts/NixOS.nix. You can change out build
for switch
, test
,
etc. Any additional arguments are passed through to the call to
nixos-rebuild
.
Usage
flk help
up
The up
subcommand is a simple shortcut for nixos-generate-config
that is
compatible with devos. There is a short explanation in the the getting started
guide.
update
The update
subcommand is a simple alias for:
nix flake update
As it sounds, this will update your lock file.
Updating Package Sources
If you pass directory name then it will update that input if the directory contains a flake.nix, with an optional arguement to update only a specific input in the subflake.
For example, you can update any package sources you may have declared in pkgs/flake.nix:
flk update pkgs
or just its nixpkgs:
flk update pkgs nixpkgs
get
The get
subcommand is useful for getting a bare copy of devos without the
git history. You can pull either the core or community branches.
Usage
flk get BRANCH DEST-DIR
If DEST-DIR is ommitted, it defaults to ./flk.
ISO
Making and writing an installable iso for hosts/NixOS.nix
is as simple as:
flk iso NixOS
dd bs=4M if=result/iso/*.iso of=/dev/$your_installation_device \
status=progress oflag=sync
This works for any file matching hosts/*.nix
excluding default.nix
.
ISO image nix store & cache
The iso image holds the store to the live environment and also acts as a binay cache
to the installer. To considerably speed up things, the image already includes all flake
inputs
as well as the devshell
closures.
While you could provision any machine with a single stick, a bespoke iso maximises those local cache hits.
For hosts that don't differ too much, a common usb stick might be ok, whereas when there are bigger differences, a bespoke usb stick will be considerably faster.
install
The install
subcommand is a simple convenience for nixos-install
, similar
to the shortcut for nixos-rebuild
, all additional arguments are passed
through.
Example
flk install NixOS
This will install hosts/NixOS.nix to /mnt. You can override this directory
using standard nixos-install
args.
home
The home
subcommand is for using your home-manager configurations outside of
NixOS, providing an awesome mechanism for keeping your environments
synchronized, even when using other systems.
Usage
The users page contains a good usage example.
Integrations
This section explores some of the optional tools included with devos to provide a solution to common concerns such as ci and remote deployment. An effort is made to choose tools that treat nix, and where possible flakes, as first class citizens.
deploy-rs
Deploy-rs is a tool for managing NixOS remote machines. It was chosen for devos after the author experienced some frustrations with the stateful nature of nixops' db. It was also designed from scratch to support flake based deployments, and so is an excellent tool for the job.
By default, all the hosts are also available as deploy-rs nodes,
configured with the hostname set to networking.hostName
; overridable via
the command line.
Usage
Just add your ssh key to the host:
{ ... }:
{
users.users.${sshUser}.openssh.authorizedKeys.keyFiles = [
../secrets/path/to/key.pub
];
}
And the private key to your user:
{ ... }:
{
home-manager.users.${sshUser}.programs.ssh = {
enable = true;
matchBlocks = {
${host} = {
host = hostName;
identityFile = ../secrets/path/to/key;
extraOptions = { AddKeysToAgent = "yes"; };
};
};
}
}
And run the deployment:
deploy "flk#hostName" --hostname host.example.com
Note:
Your user will need passwordless sudo access
Hercules CI
If you start adding your own packages and configurations, you'll probably have at least a few binary artifacts. With hercules we can build every package in our configuration automatically, on every commit. Additionally, we can have it upload all our build artifacts to a binary cache like cachix.
This will work whether your copy is a fork, or a bare template, as long as your repo is hosted on GitHub.
Setup
Just head over to hercules-ci.com to make an account.
Then follow the docs to set up an agent, if you want to deploy to a binary cache (and of course you do), be sure not to skip the binary-caches.json.
Ready to Use
The repo is already set up with the proper nix/ci.nix file, building all declared packages, checks, profiles and shells. So you can see if something breaks, and never build the same package twice!
If you want to get fancy, you could even have hercules deploy your configuration!
Note:
Hercules doesn't have access to anything encrypted in the secrets folder, so none of your secrets will accidentally get pushed to a cache by mistake.
You could pull all your secrets via your user, and then exclude it from allUsers to keep checks passing.
Pull Requests
If making a change to core, or adding a feature, please be sure to update the relevant docs. Each directory contains its own README.md, which will automatically be pulled into the mdbook. The book is rendered on every change, so the docs should always be up to date.
We also use BORS to ensure that all pull requests pass the test suite once at least one review is completed.
Community PRs
While much of your work in this template may be idiosyncratic in nature. Anything
that might be generally useful to the broader NixOS community can be synced to
the community
branch to provide a host of useful NixOS configurations available
"out of the box".
Style
If you wish to contribute please follow these guidelines:
-
format your code with
nixpkgs-fmt
. The default devshell includes a pre-commit hook that does this for you. -
The commit message follows the same semantics as nixpkgs.
- You can use a
#
symbol to specify ambiguities. For example,develop#zsh: <rest of commit message>
would tell me that your updating thezsh
subprofile living under thedevelop
profile.
- You can use a