525 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
525 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Nix Flakes: an Introduction"
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date: 2022-02-21
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tags:
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- nix
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- nixos
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series: nix-flakes
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author: Twi
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---
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Nix is a package manager that lets you have a more deterministic view of your
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software dependencies and build processes. One if its biggest weaknesses out of
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the box is that there are very few conventions on how projects using Nix should
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work together. It's like having a build system but also having to configure
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systems to run software yourself. This could mean copying a NixOS module out of
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the project's git repo, writing your own or more. In contrast to this, [Nix
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flakes](https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Flakes) define a set of conventions for how
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software can be build, run, integrated and deployed without having to rely on
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external tools such as [Niv](https://github.com/nmattia/niv) or
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[Lorri](https://github.com/nix-community/lorri) to help you do basic tasks in a
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timely manner.
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This is going to be a series of posts that will build on eachother. This post
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will be an introduction to Nix flakes and serve as a "why should I care?" style
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overview of what you can do with flakes without going into too much detail. Most
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of these will get separate posts (some more than one post).
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In my opinion, here are some of the big reasons you should care about Nix
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flakes:
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- Flakes adds project templates to Nix
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- Flakes define a standard way to say "this is a program you can run"
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- Flakes consolidate development environments into project configuration
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- Flakes can pull in dependencies from outside git repos trivially
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- Flakes can work with people that don't use flakes too
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- Flakes supports using private git repos
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- Flakes let you define system configuration alongside your application code
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- Flakes let you embed the git hash of your configurations repository into
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machines you deploy
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[Something that may also help you understand why flakes matter is that Nix by
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itself is more akin to Dockerfiles. Dockerfiles help you build the software, but
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they don't really help you run or operate the software. Nix flakes is more akin
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to docker-compose, they help you compose packages written in Nix to run across
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machines.](conversation://Mara/happy)
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## Project Templates
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One of the big annoying parts about getting into Nix is that setting up projects
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isn't totally a defined science. Nix configurations just tend to grow
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organically and can easily become weird or difficult to understand for people
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that didn't start the project. Nix flakes helps fix this by doing a few things:
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1. Defining a `flake.nix` as the central "hub" for your project's dependencies,
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exposed packages, NixOS configuration modules [and
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more](https://nixos.wiki/wiki/Flakes#Output_schema).
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2. Shipping a [set of templates](https://github.com/NixOS/templates) so that you
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can get projects started easily. Think something like
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[Yeoman](https://yeoman.io) but built directly into Nix. You can also define
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your own templates in your `flake.nix`.
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As an example that we will use for the rest of this post to help explain it,
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let's make a Go project with their Go template. First you will need to enable
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Nix flakes on your machine. If you are using NixOS, add this to your
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`configuration.nix` file:
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```nix
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nix = {
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package = pkgs.nixFlakes;
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extraOptions = ''
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experimental-features = nix-command flakes
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'';
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};
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```
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Then rebuild your system and you can continue along with the article.
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If you are not on NixOS, you will need to either edit `~/.config/nix/nix.conf`
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or `/etc/nix/nix.conf` and add the following line to it:
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```
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experimental-features = nix-command flakes
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```
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[You may need to restart the Nix daemon here with `sudo systemctl restart
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nix-daemon.service`, but if you are unsure how Nix was set up on that non-NixOS
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machine feel free to totally restart your computer.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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Now go to a temporary folder and run these commands to make a folder and create
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a new flake from a template:
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```console
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mkdir ~/tmp/go-demo
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cd ~/tmp/go-demo
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nix flake new -t templates#go-hello .
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git init && git add .
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```
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This will create a few files in the folder:
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```console
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$ ls
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flake.lock flake.nix go.mod main.go
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```
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Then you can look at `flake.nix` to see what's up:
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```nix
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{
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description = "A simple Go package";
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# Nixpkgs / NixOS version to use.
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inputs.nixpkgs.url = "nixpkgs/nixos-21.11";
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outputs = { self, nixpkgs }:
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let
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# Generate a user-friendly version number.
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version = builtins.substring 0 8 self.lastModifiedDate;
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# System types to support.
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supportedSystems = [ "x86_64-linux" "x86_64-darwin" "aarch64-linux" "aarch64-darwin" ];
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# Helper function to generate an attrset '{ x86_64-linux = f "x86_64-linux"; ... }'.
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forAllSystems = nixpkgs.lib.genAttrs supportedSystems;
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# Nixpkgs instantiated for supported system types.
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nixpkgsFor = forAllSystems (system: import nixpkgs { inherit system; });
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in
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{
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# Provide some binary packages for selected system types.
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packages = forAllSystems (system:
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let
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pkgs = nixpkgsFor.${system};
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in
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{
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go-hello = pkgs.buildGoModule {
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pname = "go-hello";
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inherit version;
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# In 'nix develop', we don't need a copy of the source tree
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# in the Nix store.
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src = ./.;
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# This hash locks the dependencies of this package. It is
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# necessary because of how Go requires network access to resolve
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# VCS. See https://www.tweag.io/blog/2021-03-04-gomod2nix/ for
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# details. Normally one can build with a fake sha256 and rely on native Go
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# mechanisms to tell you what the hash should be or determine what
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# it should be "out-of-band" with other tooling (eg. gomod2nix).
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# To begin with it is recommended to set this, but one must
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# remeber to bump this hash when your dependencies change.
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#vendorSha256 = pkgs.lib.fakeSha256;
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vendorSha256 = "sha256-pQpattmS9VmO3ZIQUFn66az8GSmB4IvYhTTCFn6SUmo=";
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};
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});
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# The default package for 'nix build'. This makes sense if the
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# flake provides only one package or there is a clear "main"
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# package.
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defaultPackage = forAllSystems (system: self.packages.${system}.go-hello);
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};
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}
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```
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This defines a single Go package that is supported on macOS and Linux for 64 bit
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x86 processors and 64 bit ARM processors.
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[In practice this spread should cover all of the main targets you'll need to
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care about for local development and cloud
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deployment.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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You can then build the flake with `nix build`:
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```console
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$ nix build
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```
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And then run it:
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```console
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$ ./result/bin/go-hello
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Hello Nix!
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```
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## Standard Default Package
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Let's take a closer look at the higher level things in the flake:
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```nix
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{
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description = "A simple Go package";
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inputs.nixpkgs.url = "nixpkgs/nixos-21.11";
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outputs = { self, nixpkgs }: {
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packages = { ... };
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defaultPackage = { ... };
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};
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}
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```
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[A note: in the rest of this article (and series of articles), when I refer to a
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"flake output", I am referring to an attribute in the `outputs` attribute of
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your `flake.nix`. Ditto with "flake input" referring to the `inputs` attribute
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of your `flake.nix`.](conversation://Cadey/enby)
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When you ran `nix build` earlier, it defaulted to building the package in
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`defaultPackage`. You can also build the `go-hello` package by running this
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command:
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```console
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$ nix build .#go-hello
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```
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And if you want to build the copy I made for this post:
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```console
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$ nix build github:Xe/gohello
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$ ./result/bin/go-hello
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Hello reader!
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```
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A standard default package means that you can more easily build software without
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having to read documentation on what file to build. `nix build` will Just Work™️.
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## Exposing Packages as Applications
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Additionally, you can expose a package as an application. This allows you to
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simplify that above `nix build` and `./result/bin/go-hello` cycle into a single
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`nix run` command. Open `flake.nix` in your favorite editor and let's configure
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`go-hello` to be the default app:
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```nix
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# below defaultPackage
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defaultApp = forAllSystems (system: {
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type = "app";
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program = "${self.packages.${system}.go-hello}/bin/go-hello";
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});
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```
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Then you can run it with `nix run`:
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```console
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$ nix run
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Hello Nix!
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```
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Or you can run my copy:
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```console
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$ nix run github:Xe/gohello/main
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Hello reader!
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```
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[What is that extra part of the URL path for? Is that a git
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branch?](conversation://Mara/hmm)
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[Yes, you can use that syntax to set the git branch that Nix should build from.
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By default it will use the default branch (typically `main`), but sometimes you
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need to specify a branch or commit directly.](conversation://Cadey/enby)
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## Development Environment Configuration
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One of Nix's superpowers is the ability to declaratively manage the development
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environment for a project so that you can be sure that everyone working on the
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project is using the same tools.
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[I use this with all of my projects to the point that when I am outside of a
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project folder I do not have any development tools
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available.](conversation://Cadey/enby)
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Flakes has the ability to specify this using the `devShell` flake output. You
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can add it to your `flake.nix` using this:
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```nix
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# after defaultApp
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devShell = forAllSystems (system:
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let pkgs = nixpkgsFor.${system};
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in pkgs.mkShell {
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buildInputs = with pkgs; [ go gopls goimports go-tools ];
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});
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```
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[I consider this to be a basic Go development environment. It includes standard
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tools such as the language server, `goimports` for better formatting and tools
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like <a href="https://staticcheck.io">staticcheck</a>. If you use staticcheck
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regularly at work, please consider throwing <a
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href="https://github.com/users/dominikh/sponsorship">Dominik</a> a couple bucks
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a month if you find it useful. It helps the project be more
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self-sustaining.](conversation://Mara/happy)
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Then you can enter the development shell with `nix develop`:
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```
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$ nix develop
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[cadey@pneuma:~/tmp/gohello]$ go version
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go version go1.16.9 linux/amd64
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```
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And then hack at your project all you want. You can send this git repo to a
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friend and they will have the same setup.
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## External Dependencies
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Now let's talk about inputs. Flake inputs let you add external dependencies to a
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project. As an example, let's look at the `nixpkgs` input:
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```nix
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# Nixpkgs / NixOS version to use.
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inputs.nixpkgs.url = "nixpkgs/nixos-21.11";
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```
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This defines the release of nixpkgs that should be used for the project. This
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template defaults to NixOS 21.11's version of nixpkgs, however we can upgrade it
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to nixos-unstable by changing it to this:
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```nix
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# Nixpkgs / NixOS version to use.
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inputs.nixpkgs.url = "nixpkgs/nixos-unstable";
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```
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Then we can run `nix flake update` and then `nix develop` and see that we are
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running a newer version of Go:
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```console
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$ nix flake update
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warning: updating lock file '/home/cadey/tmp/gohello/flake.lock':
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• Updated input 'nixpkgs':
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'github:NixOS/nixpkgs/77aa71f66fd05d9e7b7d1c084865d703a8008ab7' (2022-01-19)
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→ 'github:NixOS/nixpkgs/2128d0aa28edef51fd8fef38b132ffc0155595df' (2022-02-16)
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$ nix develop
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[cadey@pneuma:~/tmp/gohello]$ go version
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go version go1.17.7 linux/amd64
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```
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This also lets you pull in other Nix flakes projects, such as my CSS framework
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[Xess](https://github.com/Xe/Xess):
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```nix
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inputs.xess.url = "github:Xe/Xess";
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inputs.xess.inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
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```
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[Why is that second line needed?](conversation://Mara/hmm)
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[By default when you pull in another project with Nix flakes, it treats that
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project as an entirely separate universe and only interacts with the outputs of
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that flake. This means it pulls in its own version of nixpkgs, each dependency
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it has can pull in that own version of nixpkgs and vice versa ad infinitum. By
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making Xess' nixpkgs input follows our own one, we are saying "I understand this
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may be incompatible, but please use this version of nixpkgs instead". This can
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help larger projects with many inputs (such as a nixos configs repo made by
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someone with too many throwaway side projects) evaluate and build faster. Nix
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flakes does have a cached evaluator, but still it helps to avoid the problem in
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the first place.](conversation://Cadey/enby)
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Or anything you want! A useful library to pull in is
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[flake-utils](https://github.com/numtide/flake-utils), that can help you
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simplify your `flake.nix` and get rid of those ugly `forAllSystems` and
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`nixpkgsFor` functions in the `flake.nix` that this post used by default. For an
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example of a flake that uses this library, see [this
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`flake.nix`](https://tulpa.dev/Xe/mara/src/branch/main/flake.nix) from the IRC
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bot that lives in [`#xeserv`](https://web.libera.chat/#xeserv).
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[Adapting this trivial example to use `flake-utils` is an excellent exercise for
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the reader! This library should really be shipped with flakes by
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default.](conversation://Mara/happy)
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## Backwards Compatibility
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Normally you need to enable Nix flakes in your Nix daemon to take advantage of
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them. This is great for when you can do that, but sometimes you'll need to make
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things work for people without flakes enabled. This could happen when needing to
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graft in a Nix flakes project to one without flakes enabled. There is a library
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called [flake-compat](https://github.com/edolstra/flake-compat) that makes this
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easy.
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Create `default.nix` with the following contents:
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```nix
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(import (
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fetchTarball {
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url = "https://github.com/edolstra/flake-compat/archive/99f1c2157fba4bfe6211a321fd0ee43199025dbf.tar.gz";
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sha256 = "0x2jn3vrawwv9xp15674wjz9pixwjyj3j771izayl962zziivbx2"; }
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) {
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src = ./.;
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}).defaultNix
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```
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And `shell.nix` with the following contents:
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```nix
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(import (
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fetchTarball {
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url = "https://github.com/edolstra/flake-compat/archive/99f1c2157fba4bfe6211a321fd0ee43199025dbf.tar.gz";
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sha256 = "0x2jn3vrawwv9xp15674wjz9pixwjyj3j771izayl962zziivbx2"; }
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) {
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src = ./.;
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}).shellNix
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```
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Then you can use `nix-build` and `nix-shell` like you have in other Nix
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projects.
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## Private Git Repos
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Nix flakes has native support for private git repositories as inputs. This can
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be useful when trying to build software you don't want to release as open to the
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world. To use a private repo, your flake input URL should look something like
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this:
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```
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ssh+git://git@github.com:user/repo
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```
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[I'm pretty sure you could use private git repos outside of flakes, however it
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was never really clear to me _how_ you end up doing
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it.](conversation://Cadey/coffee)
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[I'm told you can bash Niv into shape enough to do this, but yeah it's never
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really been clear how you do this.](conversation://Mara/hmm)
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## Embed NixOS Modules in Flakes
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The biggest ticket item for me is that it lets you embed NixOS modules in flakes
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themselves. This lets you define the system configuration for software right
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next to where the software is defined, thus shipping it as a unit. Using this
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you can make installing software a matter of adding it to your system's flake,
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adding the module and then enabling the settings you want to enable.
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As an example, here is the NixOS module for that IRC bot I mentioned:
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```nix
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nixosModules.bot = { config, lib, ... }: {
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options.within.services.mara-bot.enable =
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lib.mkEnableOption "enable Mara bot";
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config = lib.mkIf config.within.services.mara-bot.enable {
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users.groups.mara-bot = { };
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users.users.mara-bot = {
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createHome = true;
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isSystemUser = true;
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home = "/var/lib/mara-bot";
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group = "mara-bot";
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};
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systemd.services.mara-bot = {
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wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ];
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environment.RUST_LOG = "tower_http=debug,info";
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unitConfig.ConditionPathExists = "/var/lib/mara-bot/config.yaml";
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serviceConfig = {
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User = "mara-bot";
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Group = "mara-bot";
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Restart = "always";
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WorkingDirectory = "/var/lib/mara-bot";
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ExecStart = "${self.defaultPackage."${system}"}/bin/mara";
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};
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};
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};
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};
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```
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The key important part here is the `ExecStart` line. It points back to the
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flake's default package (which is hopefully where the bot's code is defined),
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and then has systemd manage that.
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I plan to use this to radically simplify my nixos-configs repo. Right now it has
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a lot of code that is very project-specific and if I can move that into the
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projects in question, I can eliminate a lot of code out of the core of my
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configs repo.
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## Embedding Configuration Git Hash into Systems
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Finally, Nix flakes lets you see the configuration version of a system by
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embedding it at the build step. Normally NixOS lets you see the following
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information with `nixos-version --json`:
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```json
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{
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"nixosVersion": "22.05pre348581.c07b471b52b",
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"nixpkgsRevision": "c07b471b52be8fbc49a7dc194e9b37a6e19ee04d"
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}
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```
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You have the NixOS version and the nixpkgs hash. That doesn't tell you what
|
||
configuration you are running or anything about it though. However with flakes
|
||
you can embed the git hash of your configuration into the system config:
|
||
|
||
```json
|
||
{
|
||
"configurationRevision": "f53891121ce4204f57409cbe9e6fcee3b030a350",
|
||
"nixosVersion": "22.05.20220210.48d63e9",
|
||
"nixpkgsRevision": "48d63e924a2666baf37f4f14a18f19347fbd54a2"
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
This can let you make a URL pointing to the commit in that output:
|
||
|
||
```console
|
||
$ echo "https://tulpa.dev/cadey/nixos-configs/src/commit/$(ssh logos nixos-version --json | jq -r .configurationRevision)"
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Which will spit out a link to
|
||
[cadey/nixos-configs@f53891121](https://tulpa.dev/cadey/nixos-configs/src/commit/f53891121ce4204f57409cbe9e6fcee3b030a350).
|
||
|
||
I'll cover more on how to do this in the NixOS deployment post.
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
There is a lot more to get into with each of these topics. I'm only really
|
||
giving a very high level overview on them while I learn more and migrate over my
|
||
NixOS configurations to flakes
|
||
[piecemeal](https://tulpa.dev/cadey/nixos-configs). This has also given me the
|
||
opportunity to clean things up and chew out a lot of the fat from my NixOS
|
||
configurations. More to come when it is ready.
|