Co-authored-by: Jörg Thalheim <Mic92@users.noreply.github.com>
4.5 KiB
Reference Manual: disko
Module Options
We are currently having issues being able to generate proper module option documentation for our recursive disko types. However you can read the available options here. Combined wit the examples this hopefully gives you an overview.
Command Line Options
Usage: ./disko [options] disk-config.nix
or ./disko [options] --flake github:somebody/somewhere#disk-config
With flakes, disk-config is discovered first under the .diskoConfigurations top level attribute
or else from the disko module of a NixOS configuration of that name under .nixosConfigurations.
Options:
* -m, --mode mode
set the mode, either format, mount or disko
format: create partition tables, zpools, lvms, raids and filesystems
mount: mount the partition at the specified root-mountpoint
disko: first unmount and destroy all filesystems on the disks we want to format, then run the create and mount mode
* -f, --flake uri
fetch the disko config relative to this flake's root
* --arg name value
pass value to nix-build. can be used to set disk-names for example
* --argstr name value
pass value to nix-build as string
* --root-mountpoint /some/other/mnt
where to mount the device tree (default: /mnt)
* --dry-run
just show the path to the script instead of running it
* --no-deps
avoid adding another dependency closure to an in-memory installer
requires all necessary dependencies to be available in the environment
* --debug
run with set -x
Generating Disk Images with Secrets Included using Disko
Using Disko on NixOS allows you to efficiently create .raw
VM images from a
system configuration. The generated image can be used as a VM or directly
written to a physical drive to create a bootable disk. Follow the steps below to
generate disk images:
Generating the .raw
VM Image
-
Build the disko image script: Replace
mySystem
in the command below with your specific system configuration name:nix build .#nixosConfigurations.mySystem.config.system.build.diskoImagesScript
-
Execute the result file: Execute the generated result file. Running
./result --help
will output the available options:./result --help Usage: $script [options] Options: * --pre-format-files <src> <dst> copies the src to the dst on the VM, before disko is run This is useful to provide secrets like LUKS keys, or other files you need for formating * --post-format-files <src> <dst> copies the src to the dst on the finished image These end up in the images later and is useful if you want to add some extra stateful files They will have the same permissions but will be owned by root:root * --build-memory specify the ammount of memory that gets allocated to the build vm (in mb) This can be usefull if you want to build images with a more involed NixOS config By default the vm will get 1024M/1GB * --write-to-disk </dev/disk> use an actuall disk instead of writing to a file This only works if your conifg has only one disk specified There is no check if the specified path is actually a disk so you can also write to another file
Additional Configuration
-
For virtual drive use, define the image size in your Disko configuration:
disko.devices.disk.<drive>.imageSize = "32G"; # Set your preferred size
-
If the
.raw
image size is not optimal, use--write-to-disk
to write directly to a drive. This bypasses the.raw
file generation, which saves on read/write operations and is suitable for single disk setups.
Understanding the Image Generation Process
- Files specified in
--pre-format-files
and--post-format-files
are temporarily copied to/tmp
. - Files are then moved to their respective locations in the VM both before and after the Disko partitioning script runs.
- The NixOS installer is executed, having access only to
--post-format-files
. - Upon installer completion, the VM is shutdown, and the
.raw
disk files are moved to the local directory.
Note
: The auto-resizing feature is currently not available in Disko. Contributions for this feature are welcomed. Adjust the
imageSize
configuration to prevent issues related to file size and padding.
By following these instructions and understanding the process, you can smoothly generate disk images with Disko for your NixOS system configurations.