# Configuration - How to configure clan with your own machines ## Global configuration In the `flake.nix` file: - [x] set a unique `clanName`. === "**buildClan**" ```nix title="clan-core.lib.buildClan" buildClan { # Set a unique name clanName = "Lobsters"; # Should usually point to the directory of flake.nix directory = ./.; machines = { jon = { # ... }; # ... } } ``` === "**flakeParts**" !!! info "See [Clan with flake-parts](./flake-parts.md) for help migrating to flake-parts." ```nix title="clan-core.flakeModules.default" clan = { # Set a unique name clanName = "Lobsters"; machines = { jon = { # ... }; # ... } }; ``` ## Machine configuration Adding or configuring a new machine requires two simple steps: ### Step 1. Identify Target Disk-ID 1. Find the remote disk id by executing: ```bash title="setup computer" ssh root@flash-installer.local lsblk --output NAME,ID-LINK,FSTYPE,SIZE,MOUNTPOINT ``` !!! Note Replace `flash-installer.local` with the IP address of the machine if you don't have the avahi service running which resolves mDNS local domains. Which should show something like: ```{.shellSession hl_lines="6" .no-copy} NAME ID-LINK FSTYPE SIZE MOUNTPOINT sda usb-ST_16GB_AA6271026J1000000509-0:0 14.9G ├─sda1 usb-ST_16GB_AA6271026J1000000509-0:0-part1 1M ├─sda2 usb-ST_16GB_AA6271026J1000000509-0:0-part2 vfat 100M /boot └─sda3 usb-ST_16GB_AA6271026J1000000509-0:0-part3 ext4 2.9G / nvme0n1 nvme-eui.e8238fa6bf530001001b448b4aec2929 476.9G ├─nvme0n1p1 nvme-eui.e8238fa6bf530001001b448b4aec2929-part1 vfat 512M ├─nvme0n1p2 nvme-eui.e8238fa6bf530001001b448b4aec2929-part2 ext4 459.6G └─nvme0n1p3 nvme-eui.e8238fa6bf530001001b448b4aec2929-part3 swap 16.8G ``` 1. Edit the following fields inside the `flake.nix` === "**buildClan**" ```nix title="clan-core.lib.buildClan" hl_lines="18 23" buildClan { # ... machines = { "jon" = { imports = [ # ... ./modules/disko.nix ./machines/jon/configuration.nix ]; # ... # Change this to the correct ip-address or hostname # The hostname is the machine name by default clan.networking.targetHost = pkgs.lib.mkDefault "root@jon" # Change this to the ID-LINK of the desired disk shown by 'lsblk' disko.devices.disk.main = { device = "/dev/disk/by-id/__CHANGE_ME__"; } # e.g. > cat ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub users.users.root.openssh.authorizedKeys.keys = [ "" ]; # ... }; }; } ``` === "**flakeParts**" ```nix title="clan-core.flakeModules.default" hl_lines="18 23" clan = { # ... machines = { "jon" = { imports = [ # ... ./modules/disko.nix ./machines/jon/configuration.nix ]; # ... # Change this to the correct ip-address or hostname # The hostname is the machine name by default clan.networking.targetHost = pkgs.lib.mkDefault "root@jon" # Change this to the ID-LINK of the desired disk shown by 'lsblk' disko.devices.disk.main = { device = "/dev/disk/by-id/__CHANGE_ME__"; } # e.g. > cat ~/.ssh/id_ed25519.pub users.users.root.openssh.authorizedKeys.keys = [ "__YOUR_SSH_KEY__" ]; # ... }; }; }; ``` !!! Info "Replace `__CHANGE_ME__` with the appropriate identifier, such as `nvme-eui.e8238fa6bf530001001b448b4aec2929`" !!! Info "Replace `__YOUR_SSH_KEY__` with your personal key, like `ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAILoMI0NC5eT9pHlQExrvR5ASV3iW9+BXwhfchq0smXUJ jon@jon-desktop`" These steps will allow you to update your machine later. ### Step 2: Detect Drivers Generate the `hardware-configuration.nix` file for your machine by executing the following command: ```bash clan machines hw-generate [MACHINE_NAME] [HOSTNAME] ``` replace `[MACHINE_NAME]` with the name of the machine i.e. `jon` and `[HOSTNAME]` with the `ip_adress` or `hostname` of the machine within the network. i.e. `flash-installer.local` !!! Example ```bash clan machines hw-generate jon flash-installer.local ``` This command connects to `flash-installer.local` as `root`, runs `nixos-generate-config` to detect hardware configurations (excluding filesystems), and writes them to `machines/jon/hardware-configuration.nix`. ### Step 3: Custom Disk Formatting In `./modules/disko.nix`, a simple `ext4` disk partitioning scheme is defined for the Disko module. For more complex disk partitioning setups, refer to the [Disko examples](https://github.com/nix-community/disko/tree/master/example). ### Step 4: Custom Configuration Modify `./machines/jon/configuration.nix` to personalize the system settings according to your requirements. ### Step 5: Check Configuration Validate your configuration by running: ```bash nix flake check ``` This command helps ensure that your system configuration is correct and free from errors. !!! Note Integrate this step into your [Continuous Integration](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_integration) workflow to ensure that only valid Nix configurations are merged into your codebase. This practice helps maintain system stability and reduces integration issues. --- ## Whats next? - [Secrets & Facts](secrets.md): Setting up secrets with nix-sops ---