disko/README.md
Kai Norman Clasen f02d818e55
Fix example in README.md (#410)
* Fix example in README.md

The minimal example was missing the wrapping `disko.devices` attributes which resulted in the following error message:

```
error: attribute 'disko' missing

       at /nix/store/1lvj5ry4y5qyis40qcch1csf8h86z8bk-disko/share/disko/default.nix:10:49:

            9|       # _file = toString input;
           10|       imports = lib.singleton { disko.devices = cfg.disko.devices; };
             |                                                 ^
           11|       options = {
       Did you mean disk?
```

* Increase ESP size

From 100M to 500M

Co-authored-by: Jörg Thalheim <Mic92@users.noreply.github.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Jörg Thalheim <Mic92@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-10-02 17:52:49 +01:00

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# disko - Declarative disk partitioning
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<img title="" src="./docs/logo.jpeg" alt="Project logo" width="274">
[Documentation Index](./docs/INDEX.md)
NixOS is a Linux distribution where everything is described as code, with one
exception: during installation, the disk partitioning and formatting are manual
steps. **disko** aims to correct this sad 🤡 omission.
This is especially useful for unattended installations, re-installation after a
system crash or for setting up more than one identical server.
## Overview
**disko** can either be used after booting from a NixOS installer, or in
conjunction with [nixos-anywhere](https://github.com/numtide/nixos-anywhere) if
you're installing remotely.
Before using **disko**, the specifications of the disks, partitions, type of
formatting and the mount points must be defined in a Nix configuration. You can
find [examples](./example) of typical configurations in the Nix community
repository, and use one of these as the basis of your own configuration.
You can keep your configuration and re-use it for other installations, or for a
system rebuild.
**disko** is flexible, in that it supports most of the common formatting and
partitioning options, including:
- Disk layouts: GPT, MBR, and mixed.
- Partition tools: LVM, mdadm, LUKS, and more.
- Filesystems: ext4, btrfs, ZFS, bcachefs, tmpfs, and others.
It can work with these in various configurations and orders, and supports
recursive layouts.
## How to use disko
Disko doesn't require installation: it can be run directly from nix-community
repository. The [Quickstart Guide](./docs/quickstart.md) documents how to run
Disko in its simplest form when installing NixOS.
For information on other use cases, including upgrading from an older version of
**disko**, using **disko** without NixOS and downloading the module, see the
[How To Guide](./docs/HowTo.md)
For more detailed options, such as command line switches, see the
[Reference Guide](./docs/reference.md)
To access sample configurations for commonly-used disk layouts, refer to the
[examples](./example) provided.
## Sample Configuration and CLI command
A simple disko configuration may look like this:
```
{ disks ? [ "/dev/vdb" ], ... }: {
disko.devices = {
disk = {
 vdb = {
  device = builtins.elemAt disks 0;
  type = "disk";
  content = {
   type = "gpt";
   partitions = {
    ESP = {
     size = "500M";
     content = {
      type = "filesystem";
      format = "vfat";
      mountpoint = "/boot";
     };
    };
    root = {
     size = "100%";
     content = {
      type = "filesystem";
      format = "ext4";
      mountpoint = "/";
     };
    };
   };
  };
 };
};
};
}
```
If you'd saved this configuration in /tmp/disko-config.nix, and wanted to create
a disk named /dev/nvme0n1, you would run the following command to partition,
format and mount the disk.
```
$ sudo nix run github:nix-community/disko -- --mode disko /tmp/disko-config.nix --arg disks '[ "/dev/nvme0n1" ]'
```
## Related Tools
This tool is used by
[nixos-anywhere](https://github.com/numtide/nixos-anywhere), which carries out a
fully-automated remote install of NixOS.
We also acknowledge https://github.com/NixOS/nixpart, the conceptual ancestor of
this project.
## Licensing and Contribution details
This software is provided free under the
[MIT Licence](https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT).
If you would like to become a contributor, please see our
[contribution guidelines.](https://github.com/numtide/docs/contribution-guidelines.md)
---
This project is supported by [Numtide](https://numtide.com/).
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