16 KiB
Installing NixOS
Booting the system
NixOS can be installed on BIOS or UEFI systems. The procedure for a UEFI installation is by and large the same as a BIOS installation. The differences are mentioned in the steps that follow.
The installation media can be burned to a CD, or now more commonly, "burned" to a USB drive (see ).
The installation media contains a basic NixOS installation. When it's finished booting, it should have detected most of your hardware.
The NixOS manual is available by running nixos-help
.
You are logged-in automatically as nixos
. The nixos
user account has
an empty password so you can use sudo
without a password:
$ sudo -i
If you downloaded the graphical ISO image, you can run systemctl start display-manager
to start the desktop environment. If you want
to continue on the terminal, you can use loadkeys
to switch to your
preferred keyboard layout. (We even provide neo2 via loadkeys de neo
!)
If the text is too small to be legible, try setfont ter-v32n
to
increase the font size.
To install over a serial port connect with 115200n8
(e.g.
picocom -b 115200 /dev/ttyUSB0
). When the bootloader lists boot
entries, select the serial console boot entry.
Networking in the installer
The boot process should have brought up networking (check ip a
). Networking is necessary for the installer, since it will
download lots of stuff (such as source tarballs or Nixpkgs channel
binaries). It's best if you have a DHCP server on your network.
Otherwise configure networking manually using ifconfig
.
On the graphical installer, you can configure the network, wifi
included, through NetworkManager. Using the nmtui
program, you can do
so even in a non-graphical session. If you prefer to configure the
network manually, disable NetworkManager with
systemctl stop NetworkManager
.
On the minimal installer, NetworkManager is not available, so
configuration must be perfomed manually. To configure the wifi, first
start wpa_supplicant with sudo systemctl start wpa_supplicant
, then
run wpa_cli
. For most home networks, you need to type in the following
commands:
> add_network
0
> set_network 0 ssid "myhomenetwork"
OK
> set_network 0 psk "mypassword"
OK
> set_network 0 key_mgmt WPA-PSK
OK
> enable_network 0
OK
For enterprise networks, for example eduroam, instead do:
> add_network
0
> set_network 0 ssid "eduroam"
OK
> set_network 0 identity "myname@example.com"
OK
> set_network 0 password "mypassword"
OK
> set_network 0 key_mgmt WPA-EAP
OK
> enable_network 0
OK
When successfully connected, you should see a line such as this one
<3>CTRL-EVENT-CONNECTED - Connection to 32:85:ab:ef:24:5c completed [id=0 id_str=]
you can now leave wpa_cli
by typing quit
.
If you would like to continue the installation from a different machine
you can use activated SSH daemon. You need to copy your ssh key to
either /home/nixos/.ssh/authorized_keys
or
/root/.ssh/authorized_keys
(Tip: For installers with a modifiable
filesystem such as the sd-card installer image a key can be manually
placed by mounting the image on a different machine). Alternatively you
must set a password for either root
or nixos
with passwd
to be
able to login.
Partitioning and formatting
The NixOS installer doesn't do any partitioning or formatting, so you need to do that yourself.
The NixOS installer ships with multiple partitioning tools. The examples
below use parted
, but also provides fdisk
, gdisk
, cfdisk
, and
cgdisk
.
The recommended partition scheme differs depending if the computer uses Legacy Boot or UEFI.
UEFI (GPT)
Here's an example partition scheme for UEFI, using /dev/sda
as the
device.
::: {.note}
You can safely ignore parted
's informational message about needing to
update /etc/fstab.
:::
-
Create a GPT partition table.
# parted /dev/sda -- mklabel gpt
-
Add the root partition. This will fill the disk except for the end part, where the swap will live, and the space left in front (512MiB) which will be used by the boot partition.
# parted /dev/sda -- mkpart primary 512MB -8GB
-
Next, add a swap partition. The size required will vary according to needs, here a 8GB one is created.
# parted /dev/sda -- mkpart primary linux-swap -8GB 100%
::: {.note} The swap partition size rules are no different than for other Linux distributions. :::
-
Finally, the boot partition. NixOS by default uses the ESP (EFI system partition) as its /boot partition. It uses the initially reserved 512MiB at the start of the disk.
# parted /dev/sda -- mkpart ESP fat32 1MB 512MB # parted /dev/sda -- set 3 esp on
Once complete, you can follow with .
Legacy Boot (MBR)
Here's an example partition scheme for Legacy Boot, using /dev/sda
as
the device.
::: {.note}
You can safely ignore parted
's informational message about needing to
update /etc/fstab.
:::
-
Create a MBR partition table.
# parted /dev/sda -- mklabel msdos
-
Add the root partition. This will fill the the disk except for the end part, where the swap will live.
# parted /dev/sda -- mkpart primary 1MB -8GB
-
Set the root partition's boot flag to on. This allows the disk to be booted from.
# parted /dev/sda -- set 1 boot on
-
Finally, add a swap partition. The size required will vary according to needs, here a 8GiB one is created.
# parted /dev/sda -- mkpart primary linux-swap -8GB 100%
::: {.note} The swap partition size rules are no different than for other Linux distributions. :::
Once complete, you can follow with .
Formatting
Use the following commands:
-
For initialising Ext4 partitions:
mkfs.ext4
. It is recommended that you assign a unique symbolic label to the file system using the option-L label
, since this makes the file system configuration independent from device changes. For example:# mkfs.ext4 -L nixos /dev/sda1
-
For creating swap partitions:
mkswap
. Again it's recommended to assign a label to the swap partition:-L label
. For example:# mkswap -L swap /dev/sda2
-
UEFI systems
For creating boot partitions:
mkfs.fat
. Again it's recommended to assign a label to the boot partition:-n label
. For example:# mkfs.fat -F 32 -n boot /dev/sda3
-
For creating LVM volumes, the LVM commands, e.g.,
pvcreate
,vgcreate
, andlvcreate
. -
For creating software RAID devices, use
mdadm
.
Installing
-
Mount the target file system on which NixOS should be installed on
/mnt
, e.g.# mount /dev/disk/by-label/nixos /mnt
-
UEFI systems
Mount the boot file system on
/mnt/boot
, e.g.# mkdir -p /mnt/boot # mount /dev/disk/by-label/boot /mnt/boot
-
If your machine has a limited amount of memory, you may want to activate swap devices now (
swapon device
). The installer (or rather, the build actions that it may spawn) may need quite a bit of RAM, depending on your configuration.# swapon /dev/sda2
-
You now need to create a file
/mnt/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
that specifies the intended configuration of the system. This is because NixOS has a declarative configuration model: you create or edit a description of the desired configuration of your system, and then NixOS takes care of making it happen. The syntax of the NixOS configuration file is described in , while a list of available configuration options appears in . A minimal example is shown in Example: NixOS Configuration.The command
nixos-generate-config
can generate an initial configuration file for you:# nixos-generate-config --root /mnt
You should then edit
/mnt/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
to suit your needs:# nano /mnt/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
If you're using the graphical ISO image, other editors may be available (such as
vim
). If you have network access, you can also install other editors -- for instance, you can install Emacs by runningnix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -iA emacs
.- BIOS systems
-
You must set the option to specify on which disk the GRUB boot loader is to be installed. Without it, NixOS cannot boot.
-
If there are other operating systems running on the machine before installing NixOS, the option can be set to
true
to automatically add them to the grub menu. - UEFI systems
-
You must select a boot-loader, either system-boot or GRUB. The recommended option is systemd-boot: set the option to
true
.nixos-generate-config
should do this automatically for new configurations when booted in UEFI mode.You may want to look at the options starting with
boot.loader.efi
andboot.loader.systemd-boot
as well. -
With system-boot, you should not need any special configuration to detect other installed systems. With GRUB, set to
true
, but this will only detect windows partitions, not other linux distributions. If you dual boot another linux distribution, use system-boot instead.
If you need to configure networking for your machine the configuration options are described in . In particular, while wifi is supported on the installation image, it is not enabled by default in the configuration generated by
nixos-generate-config
.Another critical option is
fileSystems
, specifying the file systems that need to be mounted by NixOS. However, you typically don't need to set it yourself, becausenixos-generate-config
sets it automatically in/mnt/etc/nixos/hardware-configuration.nix
from your currently mounted file systems. (The configuration filehardware-configuration.nix
is included fromconfiguration.nix
and will be overwritten by future invocations ofnixos-generate-config
; thus, you generally should not modify it.) Additionally, you may want to look at Hardware configuration for known-hardware at this point or after installation.::: {.note} Depending on your hardware configuration or type of file system, you may need to set the option
boot.initrd.kernelModules
to include the kernel modules that are necessary for mounting the root file system, otherwise the installed system will not be able to boot. (If this happens, boot from the installation media again, mount the target file system on/mnt
, fix/mnt/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
and rerunnixos-install
.) In most cases,nixos-generate-config
will figure out the required modules. ::: -
Do the installation:
# nixos-install
This will install your system based on the configuration you provided. If anything fails due to a configuration problem or any other issue (such as a network outage while downloading binaries from the NixOS binary cache), you can re-run
nixos-install
after fixing yourconfiguration.nix
.As the last step,
nixos-install
will ask you to set the password for theroot
user, e.g.setting root password... New password: *** Retype new password: ***
::: {.note} For unattended installations, it is possible to use
nixos-install --no-root-passwd
in order to disable the password prompt entirely. ::: -
If everything went well:
# reboot
-
You should now be able to boot into the installed NixOS. The GRUB boot menu shows a list of available configurations (initially just one). Every time you change the NixOS configuration (see Changing Configuration), a new item is added to the menu. This allows you to easily roll back to a previous configuration if something goes wrong.
You should log in and change the
root
password withpasswd
.You'll probably want to create some user accounts as well, which can be done with
useradd
:$ useradd -c 'Eelco Dolstra' -m eelco $ passwd eelco
You may also want to install some software. This will be covered in .
Installation summary
To summarise, Example: Commands for Installing NixOS on /dev/sda
shows a typical sequence of commands for installing NixOS on an empty hard
drive (here /dev/sda
). Example: NixOS Configuration shows a
corresponding configuration Nix expression.
::: {#ex-partition-scheme-MBR .example}
::: {.title}
Example: Example partition schemes for NixOS on /dev/sda
(MBR)
:::
# parted /dev/sda -- mklabel msdos
# parted /dev/sda -- mkpart primary 1MiB -8GiB
# parted /dev/sda -- mkpart primary linux-swap -8GiB 100%
:::
::: {#ex-partition-scheme-UEFI .example}
::: {.title}
Example: Example partition schemes for NixOS on /dev/sda
(UEFI)
:::
# parted /dev/sda -- mklabel gpt
# parted /dev/sda -- mkpart primary 512MiB -8GiB
# parted /dev/sda -- mkpart primary linux-swap -8GiB 100%
# parted /dev/sda -- mkpart ESP fat32 1MiB 512MiB
# parted /dev/sda -- set 3 esp on
:::
::: {#ex-install-sequence .example}
::: {.title}
Example: Commands for Installing NixOS on /dev/sda
:::
With a partitioned disk.
# mkfs.ext4 -L nixos /dev/sda1
# mkswap -L swap /dev/sda2
# swapon /dev/sda2
# mkfs.fat -F 32 -n boot /dev/sda3 # (for UEFI systems only)
# mount /dev/disk/by-label/nixos /mnt
# mkdir -p /mnt/boot # (for UEFI systems only)
# mount /dev/disk/by-label/boot /mnt/boot # (for UEFI systems only)
# nixos-generate-config --root /mnt
# nano /mnt/etc/nixos/configuration.nix
# nixos-install
# reboot
:::
::: {#ex-config .example} ::: {.title} Example: NixOS Configuration :::
{ config, pkgs, ... }: {
imports = [
# Include the results of the hardware scan.
./hardware-configuration.nix
];
boot.loader.grub.device = "/dev/sda"; # (for BIOS systems only)
boot.loader.systemd-boot.enable = true; # (for UEFI systems only)
# Note: setting fileSystems is generally not
# necessary, since nixos-generate-config figures them out
# automatically in hardware-configuration.nix.
#fileSystems."/".device = "/dev/disk/by-label/nixos";
# Enable the OpenSSH server.
services.sshd.enable = true;
}
:::
Additional installation notes
<xi:include href="installing-usb.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="installing-pxe.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="installing-kexec.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="installing-virtualbox-guest.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="installing-from-other-distro.section.xml" />
<xi:include href="installing-behind-a-proxy.section.xml" />