Installing from another Linux distribution
Because Nix (the package manager) & Nixpkgs (the Nix packages
collection) can both be installed on any (most?) Linux
distributions, they can be used to install NixOS in various creative
ways. You can, for instance:
Install NixOS on another partition, from your existing Linux
distribution (without the use of a USB or optical device!)
Install NixOS on the same partition (in place!), from your
existing non-NixOS Linux distribution using
NIXOS_LUSTRATE.
Install NixOS on your hard drive from the Live CD of any Linux
distribution.
The first steps to all these are the same:
Install the Nix package manager:
Short version:
$ curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install | sh
$ . $HOME/.nix-profile/etc/profile.d/nix.sh # …or open a fresh shell
More details in the
Nix manual
Switch to the NixOS channel:
If you've just installed Nix on a non-NixOS distribution, you
will be on the nixpkgs channel by default.
$ nix-channel --list
nixpkgs https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable
As that channel gets released without running the NixOS tests,
it will be safer to use the nixos-* channels
instead:
$ nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixos-version nixpkgs
You may want to throw in a
nix-channel --update for good measure.
Install the NixOS installation tools:
You'll need nixos-generate-config and
nixos-install, but this also makes some man
pages and nixos-enter available, just in case
you want to chroot into your NixOS partition. NixOS installs
these by default, but you don't have NixOS yet..
$ nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -iA nixos-install-tools
The following 5 steps are only for installing NixOS to another
partition. For installing NixOS in place using
NIXOS_LUSTRATE, skip ahead.
Prepare your target partition:
At this point it is time to prepare your target partition.
Please refer to the partitioning, file-system creation, and
mounting steps of
If you're about to install NixOS in place using
NIXOS_LUSTRATE there is nothing to do for
this step.
Generate your NixOS configuration:
$ sudo `which nixos-generate-config` --root /mnt
You'll probably want to edit the configuration files. Refer to
the nixos-generate-config step in
for more information.
Consider setting up the NixOS bootloader to give you the ability
to boot on your existing Linux partition. For instance, if
you're using GRUB and your existing distribution is running
Ubuntu, you may want to add something like this to your
configuration.nix:
boot.loader.grub.extraEntries = ''
menuentry "Ubuntu" {
search --set=ubuntu --fs-uuid 3cc3e652-0c1f-4800-8451-033754f68e6e
configfile "($ubuntu)/boot/grub/grub.cfg"
}
'';
(You can find the appropriate UUID for your partition in
/dev/disk/by-uuid)
Create the nixbld group and user on your
original distribution:
$ sudo groupadd -g 30000 nixbld
$ sudo useradd -u 30000 -g nixbld -G nixbld nixbld
Download/build/install NixOS:
Once you complete this step, you might no longer be able to
boot on existing systems without the help of a rescue USB
drive or similar.
On some distributions there are separate PATHS for programs
intended only for root. In order for the installation to
succeed, you might have to use
PATH="$PATH:/usr/sbin:/sbin" in
the following command.
$ sudo PATH="$PATH" NIX_PATH="$NIX_PATH" `which nixos-install` --root /mnt
Again, please refer to the nixos-install step
in for more information.
That should be it for installation to another partition!
Optionally, you may want to clean up your non-NixOS
distribution:
$ sudo userdel nixbld
$ sudo groupdel nixbld
If you do not wish to keep the Nix package manager installed
either, run something like
sudo rm -rv ~/.nix-* /nix and remove the line
that the Nix installer added to your
~/.profile.
The following steps are only for installing NixOS in place
using NIXOS_LUSTRATE:
Generate your NixOS configuration:
$ sudo `which nixos-generate-config` --root /
Note that this will place the generated configuration files in
/etc/nixos. You'll probably want to edit the
configuration files. Refer to the
nixos-generate-config step in
for more information.
You'll likely want to set a root password for your first boot
using the configuration files because you won't have a chance to
enter a password until after you reboot. You can initalize the
root password to an empty one with this line: (and of course
don't forget to set one once you've rebooted or to lock the
account with sudo passwd -l root if you use
sudo)
users.users.root.initialHashedPassword = "";
Build the NixOS closure and install it in the
system profile:
$ nix-env -p /nix/var/nix/profiles/system -f '<nixpkgs/nixos>' -I nixos-config=/etc/nixos/configuration.nix -iA system
Change ownership of the /nix tree to root
(since your Nix install was probably single user):
$ sudo chown -R 0:0 /nix
Set up the /etc/NIXOS and
/etc/NIXOS_LUSTRATE files:
/etc/NIXOS officializes that this is now a
NixOS partition (the bootup scripts require its presence).
/etc/NIXOS_LUSTRATE tells the NixOS bootup
scripts to move everything that's in the
root partition to /old-root. This will move
your existing distribution out of the way in the very early
stages of the NixOS bootup. There are exceptions (we do need to
keep NixOS there after all), so the NixOS lustrate process will
not touch:
The /nix directory
The /boot directory
Any file or directory listed in
/etc/NIXOS_LUSTRATE (one per line)
Support for NIXOS_LUSTRATE was added in
NixOS 16.09. The act of "lustrating" refers to the
wiping of the existing distribution. Creating
/etc/NIXOS_LUSTRATE can also be used on
NixOS to remove all mutable files from your root partition
(anything that's not in /nix or
/boot gets "lustrated" on the
next boot.
lustrate /ˈlʌstreɪt/ verb.
purify by expiatory sacrifice, ceremonial washing, or some
other ritual action.
Let's create the files:
$ sudo touch /etc/NIXOS
$ sudo touch /etc/NIXOS_LUSTRATE
Let's also make sure the NixOS configuration files are kept once
we reboot on NixOS:
$ echo etc/nixos | sudo tee -a /etc/NIXOS_LUSTRATE
Finally, move the /boot directory of your
current distribution out of the way (the lustrate process will
take care of the rest once you reboot, but this one must be
moved out now because NixOS needs to install its own boot files:
Once you complete this step, your current distribution will no
longer be bootable! If you didn't get all the NixOS
configuration right, especially those settings pertaining to
boot loading and root partition, NixOS may not be bootable
either. Have a USB rescue device ready in case this happens.
$ sudo mv -v /boot /boot.bak &&
sudo /nix/var/nix/profiles/system/bin/switch-to-configuration boot
Cross your fingers, reboot, hopefully you should get a NixOS
prompt!
If for some reason you want to revert to the old distribution,
you'll need to boot on a USB rescue disk and do something along
these lines:
# mkdir root
# mount /dev/sdaX root
# mkdir root/nixos-root
# mv -v root/* root/nixos-root/
# mv -v root/nixos-root/old-root/* root/
# mv -v root/boot.bak root/boot # We had renamed this by hand earlier
# umount root
# reboot
This may work as is or you might also need to reinstall the boot
loader.
And of course, if you're happy with NixOS and no longer need the
old distribution:
sudo rm -rf /old-root
It's also worth noting that this whole process can be automated.
This is especially useful for Cloud VMs, where provider do not
provide NixOS. For instance,
nixos-infect
uses the lustrate process to convert Digital Ocean droplets to
NixOS from other distributions automatically.