--- title: Running Guix on NixOS date: 2018-07-17 layout: post lang: en ref: running-guix-on-nixos --- I wanted to run Guix on a NixOS machine. Even though the Guix manual explains how to do it [step by step][0], I needed a few extra ones to make it work properly. [0]: https://www.gnu.org/software/guix/manual/en/html_node/Binary-Installation.html#Binary-Installation I couldn't just install GuixSD because my wireless network card doesn't have any free drivers (yet). ## Creating `guixbuilder` users Guix requires you to create non-root users that will be used to perform the builds in the isolated environments. The [manual][1] already provides you with a ready to run (as root) command for creating the build users: [1]: https://www.gnu.org/software/guix/manual/en/html_node/Build-Environment-Setup.html#Build-Environment-Setup ```bash groupadd --system guixbuild for i in `seq -w 1 10`; do useradd -g guixbuild -G guixbuild \ -d /var/empty -s `which nologin` \ -c "Guix build user $i" --system \ guixbuilder$i; done ``` However, In my personal NixOS I have disabled [`users.mutableUsers`][2], which means that even if I run the above command it means that they'll be removed once I rebuild my OS: [2]: https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/index.html#sec-user-management ```shell $ sudo nixos-rebuild switch (...) removing user ‘guixbuilder7’ removing user ‘guixbuilder3’ removing user ‘guixbuilder10’ removing user ‘guixbuilder1’ removing user ‘guixbuilder6’ removing user ‘guixbuilder9’ removing user ‘guixbuilder4’ removing user ‘guixbuilder2’ removing user ‘guixbuilder8’ removing user ‘guixbuilder5’ (...) ``` Instead of enabling `users.mutableUsers` I could add the Guix users by adding them to my system configuration: ```nix { config, pkgs, ...}: { # ... NixOS usual config ellided ... users = { mutableUsers = false; extraUsers = let andrehUser = { andreh = { # my custom user config }; }; buildUser = (i: { "guixbuilder${i}" = { # guixbuilder$i group = "guixbuild"; # -g guixbuild extraGroups = ["guixbuild"]; # -G guixbuild home = "/var/empty"; # -d /var/empty shell = pkgs.nologin; # -s `which nologin` description = "Guix build user ${i}"; # -c "Guix buid user $i" isSystemUser = true; # --system }; } ); in # merge all users pkgs.lib.fold (str: acc: acc // buildUser str) andrehUser # for i in `seq -w 1 10` (map (pkgs.lib.fixedWidthNumber 2) (builtins.genList (n: n+1) 10)); extraGroups.guixbuild = { name = "guixbuild"; }; }; } ``` Here I used `fold` and the `//` operator to merge all of the configuration sets into a single `extraUsers` value. ## Creating the `systemd` service One other thing missing was the `systemd` service. First I couldn't just copy the `.service` file to `/etc` since in NixOS that folder isn't writable. But also I wanted the service to be better integrated with the OS. That was a little easier than creating the users, all I had to do was translate the provided [`guix-daemon.service.in`][3] configuration to an equivalent Nix expression [3]: https://git.savannah.gnu.org/cgit/guix.git/tree/etc/guix-daemon.service.in?id=00c86a888488b16ce30634d3a3a9d871ed6734a2 ```ini # This is a "service unit file" for the systemd init system to launch # 'guix-daemon'. Drop it in /etc/systemd/system or similar to have # 'guix-daemon' automatically started. [Unit] Description=Build daemon for GNU Guix [Service] ExecStart=/var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/guix-profile/bin/guix-daemon --build-users-group=guixbuild Environment=GUIX_LOCPATH=/root/.guix-profile/lib/locale RemainAfterExit=yes StandardOutput=syslog StandardError=syslog # See . # Some package builds (for example, go@1.8.1) may require even more than # 1024 tasks. TasksMax=8192 [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target ``` This sample `systemd` configuration file became: ```nix guix-daemon = { enable = true; description = "Build daemon for GNU Guix"; serviceConfig = { ExecStart = "/var/guix/profiles/per-user/root/guix-profile/bin/guix-daemon --build-users-group=guixbuild"; Environment="GUIX_LOCPATH=/root/.guix-profile/lib/locale"; RemainAfterExit="yes"; StandardOutput="syslog"; StandardError="syslog"; TaskMax= "8192"; }; wantedBy = [ "multi-user.target" ]; }; ``` There you go! After running `sudo nixos-rebuild switch` I could get Guix up and running: ```bash $ guix package -i hello The following package will be installed: hello 2.10 /gnu/store/bihfrh609gkxb9dp7n96wlpigiv3krfy-hello-2.10 substitute: updating substitutes from 'https://mirror.hydra.gnu.org'... 100.0% The following derivations will be built: /gnu/store/nznmdn6inpwxnlkrasydmda4s2vsp9hg-profile.drv /gnu/store/vibqrvw4c8lacxjrkqyzqsdrmckv77kq-fonts-dir.drv /gnu/store/hi8alg7wi0wgfdi3rn8cpp37zhx8ykf3-info-dir.drv /gnu/store/cvkbp378cvfjikz7mjymhrimv7j12p0i-ca-certificate-bundle.drv /gnu/store/d62fvxymnp95rzahhmhf456bsf0xg1c6-manual-database.drv Creating manual page database... 1 entries processed in 0.0 s 2 packages in profile $ hello Hello, world! ``` Some improvements to this approach are: 1. looking into [NixOS modules][4] and trying to bundle everything together into a single logical unit; 2. [build Guix from source][5] and share the Nix store and daemon with Guix. Happy Guix/Nix hacking! [4]: https://nixos.org/nixos/manual/index.html#sec-writing-modules [5]: https://www.gnu.org/software/guix/manual/en/html_node/Requirements.html#Requirements