devos/DOC.md
Timothy DeHerrera e078e7a229
DOC.md: split off from README.md
Keep the README.md lean and use DOC.md for more detailed explanations. While
revising user documentation, a default `nixos` user profile was created, which
serves as a goood base example.
2020-01-10 23:49:18 -07:00

99 lines
4.1 KiB
Markdown

## Hosts
Module declarations dependant on particular machines should be stored in the
[hosts](hosts) directory. Every file in this directory will be added automatically
to the the `nixosConfigurations` flake output and thus becomes deployable via
`nixos-rebuild` and `rebuild`.
See [`hosts/default.nix`](hosts/default.nix) for the implementation.
## Profiles
A profile is any directory under [profiles](profiles) containing a `default.nix`
defining a valid NixOS module, with the added restriction that no new
delclarations to the `options` _or_ `config` attributes are allowed
(use [modules](modules) instead). Their purpose is to provide abstract
expressions suitable for reuse by multiple deployments. They are perhaps _the_
key mechanism by which we keep this repo maintainable.
Profiles can have subprofiles which are themselves just profiles that live under
another. There's no hard rule that everything in the folder must be imported by
its `default.nix`, so you can also store relevant code that is useful but not
wanted by default in, say, an `alt.nix`. Importantly, every subdirectory in a
profile should be independent of its parent. i.e:
```nix
{
# importing `profile` without implicitly importing `some`
imports = [ ./profiles/some/profile ];
}
```
It is okay for profiles to depend on other profiles so long as they are
explicitly loaded via `imports`.
Optionally, you may choose to export your profiles via the flake output. If
you include it in the list defined in [profiles/list.nix](profiles/list.nix),
it will be available to other flakes via `nixosModules.profiles`.
## Users
User declarations belong in the `users` directory.
These are actually just a special case of [profiles](#profiles) attached to
a particular interactive user. Its primarily for declarations to
`users.users.<new-user>` where `<new-user>.isNormalUser` is true.
This is a convenient place to import your profiles such that a particular user
always has a reliable stack.
For convenience, [home-manager][home-manager] is available automatically for
home directory setup and should only be used from this directory.
## Lib
The [lib](lib) directory contains a file `utils.nix` which is an attribute set
meant to consist mainly of utility functions you might want to write and use
throughout the configuration. They are available via a new `usr` attribute
passed to every NixOS module, eg:
```
# hosts/some-host.nix
{ usr, ... }:
let
inherit (usr) utils;
data = utils.myFunction # ...
in
{
# NixOS configuration
}
```
## Secrets
Anything you wish to keep encrypted goes in the `secrets` directory, which is
created on first entering a `nix-shell`.
Be sure to run `git crypt init`, before committing anything to this directory.
Be sure to check out git-crypt's [documentation](https://github.com/AGWA/git-crypt)
if your not familiar. The filter is already set up to encrypt everything in this
folder by default.
To keep [profiles](profiles) reusable across configurations, secrets should
only be imported from the `users` or [`hosts`](hosts) directory.
## Modules, Packages and Overlays
All expressions in both [modules/list.nix](modules/list.nix) and
[pkgs/default.nix](pkgs/default.nix) are available globally, anywhere else in the
repo. They are additionally included in the `nixosModules` and `overlay` flake
outputs, respectively. Packages can manually be added to [flake.nix](flake.nix)
for inclusion in the `packages` output as well.
The directory structure is identical to nixpkgs to provide a kind of staging area
for any modules or packages we might be wanting to merge there later. If your not
familiar or can't be bothered, simply dropping a valid nix file and pointing the
`default.nix` to it, is all that's really required.
As for overlays, they should be defined in the [overlays](overlays) directory.
They will be automatically pulled in for use by all configurations. Nix command
line tools will be able to read overlays from here as well since it is set as
`nixpkgs-overlays` in `NIX_PATH`. And of course they will be exported via the
flake output `overlays` as well.
[home-manager]: https://github.com/rycee/home-manager