Networking
Networking config always goes in your system configuration.
Configuration
Static IP for network adapter
The following example configures a static IPv6 address and a default gateway for the interface ens3
networking = {
interfaces = {
ens3.ipv6.addresses = [{
address = "2a01:4f8:1c1b:16d0::";
prefixLength = 64;
}];
};
defaultGateway6 = {
address = "fe80::1";
interface = "ens3";
};
};
Hosts file
To edit /etc/hosts
just add something like this to your configuration.nix
:
networking.extraHosts = ''
127.0.0.2 other-localhost
10.0.0.1 server
'';
Port forwarding
In this example we're going to forward the port 80
via NAT from our internal network interface ens3
to the host 10.100.0.3
on our external interface wg0
.
networking = {
nftables = {
enable = true;
ruleset = ''
table ip nat {
chain PREROUTING {
type nat hook prerouting priority dstnat; policy accept;
iifname "ens3" tcp dport 80 dnat to 10.100.0.3:80
}
}
'';
};
firewall = {
enable = true;
allowedTCPPorts = [ 80 ];
};
nat = {
enable = true;
internalInterfaces = [ "ens3" ];
externalInterface = "wg0";
forwardPorts = [
{
sourcePort = 80;
proto = "tcp";
destination = "10.100.0.3:80";
}
];
};
};
For IPv6 port forwarding, the example would look like this. Icoming connections on the address 2001:db8::
and port 80
will be forwarded to [fe80::1234:5678:9abc:def0]:80
.
networking = {
nftables = {
enable = true;
ruleset = ''
table ip6 nat {
chain PREROUTING {
type nat hook prerouting priority dstnat; policy accept;
iifname "ens3" ip6 daddr [2001:db8::] tcp dport 80 dnat to [fe80::1234:5678:9abc:def0]:80
}
}
'';
};
firewall = {
enable = true;
allowedTCPPorts = [ 80 ];
};
nat = {
enable = true;
internalInterfaces = [ "ens3" ];
externalInterface = "wg0";
enableIPv6 = true;
internalIPv6s = [ "2001:db8::/64" ];
externalIPv6 = "fe80::1234:5678:9abc:def0";
forwardPorts = [
{
sourcePort = 80;
proto = "tcp";
destination = "fe80::1234:5678:9abc:def0]:80";
}
];
};
};
IPv6
Prefix delegation with fixed DUID
Sometimes the hosting provider manages IPv6 networks via a so-called DUID or clientid. This snippet is required to make the network routable:
{ config, pkgs, ... }:
let
# Get this from your hosting provider
clientid = "00:11:22:33:44:55:66:77:88:99";
interface = "enp2s0";
subnet = "56";
network = "2001:bbb:3333:1111::/${subnet}";
own_ip = "2001:bbb:3333:1111::1/${subnet}";
in {
# ... snip ...
networking.enableIPv6 = true;
networking.useDHCP = true;
networking.dhcpcd.persistent = true;
networking.dhcpcd.extraConfig = ''
clientid "${clientid}"
noipv6rs
interface ${interface}
ia_pd 1/${network} ${interface}
static ip6_address=${own_ip}
'';
environment.etc."dhcpcd.duid".text = clientid;
}
Source: gleber gist for online.net IPv6 config in NixOS
Note: Recent versions of dhcpcd move the duid file to /var/db/dcpcd/duid. For that to work, you have to replace the above environment.etc line with something like:
systemd.services.dhcpcd.preStart = ''
cp ${pkgs.writeText "duid" "<ID>"} /var/db/dhcpcd/duid
'';
VLANs
Refer to networking.vlans
in the manual.
Below is a complete networking example showing two interfaces, one with VLAN trunk tagging and one without.
enp2s1
is a normal network interface at 192.168.1.2
with no VLAN information.
enp2s0
is the virtual LAN trunk with two tagged VLANs, vlan100
and vlan101
.
vlan100
is in the 10.1.1.X
network and vlan101
is in the 10.10.10.X
network.
The hostID
should be unique among your machines, as mentioned in the manual.
Complete networking section example:
networking = {
hostId = "deadb33f";
hostName = "nixos";
domain = "example.com";
dhcpcd.enable = false;
interfaces.enp2s1.ipv4.addresses = [{
address = "192.168.1.2";
prefixLength = 28;
}];
vlans = {
vlan100 = { id=100; interface="enp2s0"; };
vlan101 = { id=101; interface="enp2s0"; };
};
interfaces.vlan100.ipv4.addresses = [{
address = "10.1.1.2";
prefixLength = 24;
}];
interfaces.vlan101.ipv4.addresses = [{
address = "10.10.10.3";
prefixLength = 24;
}];
defaultGateway = "192.168.1.1";
nameservers = [ "1.1.1.1" "8.8.8.8" ];
};