What happens during a system switch?
Running nixos-rebuild switch is one of the more
common tasks under NixOS. This chapter explains some of the
internals of this command to make it simpler for new module
developers to configure their units correctly and to make it easier
to understand what is happening and why for curious administrators.
nixos-rebuild, like many deployment solutions,
calls switch-to-configuration which resides in a
NixOS system at $out/bin/switch-to-configuration.
The script is called with the action that is to be performed like
switch, test,
boot. There is also the
dry-activate action which does not really perform
the actions but rather prints what it would do if you called it with
test. This feature can be used to check what
service states would be changed if the configuration was switched
to.
If the action is switch or
boot, the bootloader is updated first so the
configuration will be the next one to boot. Unless
NIXOS_NO_SYNC is set to 1,
/nix/store is synced to disk.
If the action is switch or
test, the currently running system is inspected
and the actions to switch to the new system are calculated. This
process takes two data sources into account:
/etc/fstab and the current systemd status. Mounts
and swaps are read from /etc/fstab and the
corresponding actions are generated. If a new mount is added, for
example, the proper .mount unit is marked to be
started. The current systemd state is inspected, the difference
between the current system and the desired configuration is
calculated and actions are generated to get to this state. There are
a lot of nuances that can be controlled by the units which are
explained here.
After calculating what should be done, the actions are carried out.
The order of actions is always the same:
Stop units (systemctl stop)
Run activation script ($out/activate)
See if the activation script requested more units to restart
Restart systemd if needed
(systemd daemon-reexec)
Forget about the failed state of units
(systemctl reset-failed)
Reload systemd (systemctl daemon-reload)
Reload systemd user instances
(systemctl --user daemon-reload)
Set up tmpfiles (systemd-tmpfiles --create)
Reload units (systemctl reload)
Restart units (systemctl restart)
Start units (systemctl start)
Inspect what changed during these actions and print units that
failed and that were newly started
Most of these actions are either self-explaining but some of them
have to do with our units or the activation script. For this reason,
these topics are explained in the next sections.