Hi, sorry if that title isn't very clear. I just started learning about nix a couple days ago; I'll explain what I mean.
I'm trying to set up a web application that I'm currently hosting with Docker containers, but do it with nix instead, like what's shown in this blog post: https://carjorvaz.com/posts/the-holy-grail-nextcloud-setup-made-easy-by-nixos/
However, I don't have NixOS on my server. I'm using Debian, with the nix package manager installed.
Is it possible to use a nix config file, like the one below, when only using the nix package manager? Currently it errors when I try to call nix-build
with it, giving an error about calling a lambda function that never called self
. If I remove the self
argument, it complains about config
, and so on.
{ self, config, lib, pkgs, ... }:
{
services = {
nextcloud = {
enable = true;
hostName = "cloud.example.com";
package = pkgs.nextcloud27;
# Let NixOS install and configure the database automatically.
database.createLocally = true;
# Let NixOS install and configure Redis caching automatically.
configureRedis = true;
< other settings here... >
};
};
}
From what I've read, the services
part of that creates systemd services, which makes me think that it only works if you're on a full NixOS system and not only using the nix package manager. But it's been difficult to find a clear answer on that, probably because I'm still learning what terms to search for.
All of the configuration options you're specifying there are for the nextcloud NixOS module, it's not a magical part of Nix itself. Same with the
self
and other arguments at the top. Outside of NixOS (and home-manager, for user-level installations), all Nix is going to be able to do for you is build software, it cannot do runtime configuration or other alterations to your system like that.Thanks, that makes sense. When I saw the error about how
self
andconfig
weren't being passed in, I assumed those must be values that NixOS gives you, not the plain package manager.I saw a blog post a while ago that said you can basically get all the benefits of NixOS just by using the package manager. Sounds like that's not so true, although the package manager is definitely very cool by itself.