this post was submitted on 05 Aug 2023
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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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First up, forget about install NixOS as a full distribution for the moment, instead just install the Nix packagemanager on your current system. That gives you like a quick&easy way to enjoy most of the benefits of NixOS without replacing what you already have up&running.
As for things to note:
nix-command and flakes are the new way of doing things, but still not enabled by default, this can make some old documentation a bit confusing, as this update completely changes the CLI interface, just enable them and ignore everything that keeps taking about the old `nix-env"
you'll be downloading a lot, NixOS has no binary compatibility for libraries, meaning, if a library changes, everything that depended on it changes as well, this can cause seemingly trivial updates to balloon into 30GB downloads
expect your installation to be bigger than usual, as upgrades will keep all the old software around, i.e. you can just boot into the previous version with a single click until you
nix-collect-garbage -d
all the old stuff, on systems with 32GB flash you have to be a bit careful to not run out of storageno LTS releases, you'll have to update every six months
almost no compatibility to third party software by default, /bin/sh and /usr/bin/env are the only thing it has in common with the normal FHS file system layout that everybody else is using, so expect every
install.sh
to fail, there are of course ways around it (e.g.buildFHSEnv
), but they require some extra effortall system configuration happens in
/etc/nixos/
, the rest of/etc
is just read-only symlinks.nix
configuration file syntax is a lazy evaluated functional language, that looks somewhat similar to JSON, it's quite a simple language, but not one that you can easily figure out just by looking at it (e.g. ":" defines a function, functions can only have one argument, everything else is done with currying), read the manualhttps://search.nixos.org/options will be your best friend and
nix repl
followed by:l
to tab-complete your way through the Nix structureOverall I am very happy with NixOS. Switching to NixOS was the first time in a decade that Linux started to be fun again. It comes with an enormous package collection. Building your own packages is trivial. It is possible to upgrade, downgrade or just run multiple versions in parallel, so no forced-upgrades as on other distributions. Also the Nix package manager can work as first-class build system, meaning git repositories can be treated as full packages (assuming they contain a flake.nix), packages by the distribution no longer have to exist as this weird appendage that has to exist independently from Upstream.