# This module creates a virtual machine from the NixOS configuration. # Building the `config.system.build.vm' attribute gives you a command # that starts a KVM/QEMU VM running the NixOS configuration defined in # `config'. The Nix store is shared read-only with the host, which # makes (re)building VMs very efficient. However, it also means you # can't reconfigure the guest inside the guest - you need to rebuild # the VM in the host. On the other hand, the root filesystem is a # read/writable disk image persistent across VM reboots. { config, pkgs, ... }: with pkgs.lib; let vmName = config.networking.hostName; options = { virtualisation.memorySize = mkOption { default = 384; description = '' Memory size (M) of virtual machine. ''; }; virtualisation.diskImage = mkOption { default = "./${vmName}.qcow2"; description = '' Path to the disk image containing the root filesystem. The image will be created on startup if it does not exist. ''; }; }; # Shell script to start the VM. startVM = '' #! ${pkgs.stdenv.shell} export PATH=${pkgs.samba}/sbin:$PATH NIX_DISK_IMAGE=''${NIX_DISK_IMAGE:-${config.virtualisation.diskImage}} if ! test -e "$NIX_DISK_IMAGE"; then ${pkgs.qemu_kvm}/bin/qemu-img create -f qcow2 "$NIX_DISK_IMAGE" 512M || exit 1 fi # -no-kvm-irqchip is needed to prevent the CIFS mount from # hanging the VM on x86_64. exec ${pkgs.qemu_kvm}/bin/qemu-system-x86_64 -m ${toString config.virtualisation.memorySize} \ -no-kvm-irqchip \ -net nic,model=virtio -net user -smb / \ -drive file=$NIX_DISK_IMAGE,if=virtio,boot=on \ -kernel ${config.system.build.toplevel}/kernel \ -initrd ${config.system.build.toplevel}/initrd \ $QEMU_OPTS \ -append "$(cat ${config.system.build.toplevel}/kernel-params) init=${config.system.build.bootStage2} systemConfig=${config.system.build.toplevel} $QEMU_KERNEL_PARAMS" ''; in { require = options; # All the modules the initrd needs to mount the host filesystem via # CIFS. Also use paravirtualised network and block devices for # performance. boot.initrd.availableKernelModules = [ "cifs" "virtio_net" "virtio_pci" "virtio_blk" "virtio_balloon" "nls_utf8" ]; boot.initrd.extraUtilsCommands = '' # We need mke2fs in the initrd. cp ${pkgs.e2fsprogs}/sbin/mke2fs $out/bin ''; boot.initrd.postDeviceCommands = '' # Set up networking. Needed for CIFS mounting. ipconfig 10.0.2.15:::::eth0:none # If the disk image appears to be empty (fstype "unknown"; # hacky!!!), run mke2fs to initialise. eval $(fstype /dev/vda) if test "$FSTYPE" = unknown; then mke2fs -t ext3 /dev/vda fi ''; # Mount the host filesystem via CIFS, and bind-mount the Nix store # of the host into our own filesystem. We use mkOverride to allow # this module to be applied to "normal" NixOS system configuration, # where the regular value for the `fileSystems' attribute should be # disregarded for the purpose of building a VM test image (since # those filesystems don't exist in the VM). fileSystems = mkOverride 50 {} [ { mountPoint = "/"; device = "/dev/vda"; } { mountPoint = "/hostfs"; device = "//10.0.2.4/qemu"; fsType = "cifs"; options = "guest,username=nobody,noperm"; neededForBoot = true; } { mountPoint = "/nix/store"; device = "/hostfs/nix/store"; options = "bind"; neededForBoot = true; } # Mount the host's Nix database. This allows read-only Nix # operations in the guest to work properly. { mountPoint = "/nix/var/nix/db"; device = "/hostfs/nix/var/nix/db"; options = "bind"; } ]; # Starting DHCP brings down eth0, which kills the connection to the # host filesystem and thus deadlocks the system. networking.useDHCP = false; networking.defaultGateway = "10.0.2.2"; networking.nameservers = [ "10.0.2.3" ]; networking.interfaces = singleton { name = "eth0"; ipAddress = "10.0.2.15"; }; system.build.vm = pkgs.runCommand "nixos-vm" {} '' ensureDir $out/bin ln -s ${config.system.build.toplevel} $out/system ln -s ${pkgs.writeScript "run-nixos-vm" startVM} $out/bin/run-${vmName}-vm ''; # sendfile() is currently broken over CIFS, so fix it here for all # configurations that use Apache. services.httpd.extraConfig = '' EnableSendFile Off ''; # When building a regular system configuration, override whatever # video driver the host uses. services.xserver.videoDriver = mkOverride 50 {} null; services.xserver.videoDrivers = mkOverride 50 {} [ "cirrus" "vesa" ]; services.xserver.defaultDepth = mkOverride 50 {} 0; services.xserver.resolutions = mkOverride 50 {} []; # Wireless won't work in the VM. networking.enableWLAN = mkOverride 50 {} false; }