Creating a NixOS live CD

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Revision as of 12:09, 24 November 2023 by Onny (talk | contribs)
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Motivation

Creating a modified NixOS LiveCD out of an existing working NixOS installation has a number of benefits:

  • Ensures authenticity.
  • No need for internet access.
  • It is easy to add your own packages and configuration changes to the image.

Building

Building minimal NixOS installation CD with the nix-build command by creating this iso.nix-file. In this example with Neovim preinstalled.

{ config, pkgs, ... }:
{
  imports = [
    <nixpkgs/nixos/modules/installer/cd-dvd/installation-cd-minimal.nix>

    # Provide an initial copy of the NixOS channel so that the user
    # doesn't need to run "nix-channel --update" first.
    <nixpkgs/nixos/modules/installer/cd-dvd/channel.nix>
  ];
  environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.neovim ];
}

Build the image via:

nix-build '<nixpkgs/nixos>' -A config.system.build.isoImage -I nixos-config=iso.nix

Alternativley, use Nix Flakes to generate a ISO installation image, using the 23.11-beta branch as nixpkgs source:

Breeze-text-x-plain.png
flake.nix
{
  description = "Bcachefs enabled installation media";
  inputs.nixos.url = "nixpkgs/23.11-beta";
  outputs = { self, nixos }: {
    nixosConfigurations = {
      exampleIso = nixos.lib.nixosSystem {
        system = "x86_64-linux";
        modules = [
          "${nixos}/nixos/modules/installer/cd-dvd/installation-cd-minimal.nix"
          ({ pkgs, ... }: {
            environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.neovim ];
          })
        ];
      };
    };
  };
}


The following commands will generate the iso-image

# git init
# git add flake.nix
# nix build .#nixosConfigurations.exampleIso.config.system.build.isoImage

The resulting image can be found in result:

$ ls result/iso/
nixos-17.09.git.158ec57-x86_64-linux.iso

Testing the image

To inspect the contents of the ISO image:

$ mkdir mnt
$ sudo mount -o loop result/iso/nixos-*.iso mnt
$ ls mnt
boot  EFI  isolinux  nix-store.squashfs  version.txt
$ umount mnt

To boot the ISO image in an emulator:

$ nix-shell -p qemu
$ qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -m 256 -cdrom result/iso/nixos-*.iso

SSH

In your iso.nix:

{
  ...
  # Enable SSH in the boot process.
  systemd.services.sshd.wantedBy = pkgs.lib.mkForce [ "multi-user.target" ];
  users.users.root.openssh.authorizedKeys.keys = [
    "ssh-ed25519 AaAeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee username@host"
  ];
  ...
}

Static IP Address

Static IP addresses can be set in the image itself. This can be useful for VPS installation.

{
  ...
  networking = {
    usePredictableInterfaceNames = false;
    interfaces.eth0.ip4 = [{
      address = "64.137.201.46";
      prefixLength = 24;
    }];
    defaultGateway = "64.137.201.1";
    nameservers = [ "8.8.8.8" ];
  };
  ...
}

Building faster

The build process is slow because of compression.

Here are some timings for nix-build:

Compression results
squashfsCompression Time Size
lz4 100s 59%
gzip -Xcompression-level 1 105s 52%
gzip 210s 49%
xz -Xdict-size 100% (default) 450s 43%

See also: mksquashfs benchmarks

If you don't care about file size, you can use a faster compression by adding this to your iso.nix:

{
  isoImage.squashfsCompression = "gzip -Xcompression-level 1";
}

See also